Environment Award for Children’s Literature: 2022 Shortlist Announced!

Environment Award for Children’s Literature: 2022 Shortlist Announced!

Every year the Wilderness Society shortlists the best children’s nature books. Showcasing some of the best writers and illustrators working in children’s literature, the award promotes a love of nature in kids. The new Karajia Award celebrates this continent’s First Nations authors and/or illustrated children’s books.

This year’s awards will take place during Nature Book Week, from 5-11 September. Find out what titles made the shortlist here…

The Karajia Award shortlist
  • Sea Country by Aunty Patsy Cameron, illustrated by Lisa Kennedy (Magabala Books)
  • Sharing by Aunty Fay Muir and Sue Lawson, illustrated by Leanne Mulgo Watson (Magabala Books)
  • Wiradjuri Country by Larry Brandy (National Library of Australia)
  • Welcome to Our Country: Somebody’s Land by Adam Goodes and Ellie Laing, illustrated by David Hardy (Allen & Unwin)

See the full shortlist for the Karajia Award here…

Picture Fiction
  • The Accidental Penguin Hotel by Andrew Kelly, illustrated by Dean Jones (Wild Dog Books)
  • Sharing by Aunty Fay Muir and Sue Lawson, illustrated by Leanne Mulgo Watson (Magabala Books)
  • The River by Sally Morgan, illustrated by Johnny Warrkatja Malibirr (Magabala Books)
  • Saving Seal: The Plastic Predicament by Diane Jackson Hill, illustrated by Craig Smith (Museums Victoria Publishing)

See the full shortlist for Picture Fiction here…

Non-fiction
  • The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Peculiar Pairs in Nature by Sami Bayly (Hachette Australia)
  • The Australian Climate Change Book by Polly Marsden, illustrated by Chris Nixon (Hachette Australia)
  • The Way of Weedy Seadragon by Anne Morgan, illustrated by Lois Bury (CSIRO Publishing)
  • The Gentle Genius of Trees by Philip Bunting (Omnibus)
Fiction

See the full 2022 shortlist here…

Nature Book Week is a space for us all to celebrate nature writing in all its forms, from science writing to poetry, fiction and non-fiction. From 5-11 September, you’ll find a week of talks and events culminating in the Environment Award For Children’s Literature.

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  1. Andree Oren says:

    This book, likely rich in cultural storytelling, explores the concept of Sea Country, potentially providing Watermelon Game insights into the relationship between Indigenous communities and the sea.