Costa Book Awards 2001: Complete list of winners
The 2001 Costa Book Awards celebrated a remarkable diversity of voices and storytelling across all five categories. Diana Souhami’s Selkirk’s Island, a meticulously researched biography of castaway Alexander Selkirk, took the Biography prize, while Philip Pullman rounded out his monumental His Dark Materials trilogy with The Amber Spyglass, capturing the Children’s Book award and cementing the series’ place in literary history. Patrick Neate’s debut novel Twelve Bar Blues won the Novel category with its assured prose, and Selima Hill’s collection Bunny brought distinctive wit and insight to the Poetry prize.
What made this year’s Costa awards particularly compelling was the breadth of talent recognized—from Pullman’s epic fantasy legacy to the fresh promise of debut author Sid Smith with Something Like A House. The Costa Book Awards, one of the UK’s most prestigious literary honors, continued its tradition of spotlighting both established masters and exciting new voices. These five winners represented the kinds of books that the award has long championed: works of genuine imagination, craft, and cultural importance that resonate with readers beyond the literary establishment.
Here are the complete 2001 Costa Book Awards winners:
Biography
Selkirk’s Island by Diana Souhami
Children’s Book
The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman
First Novel
Something Like A House by Sid Smith
Novel
Twelve Bar Blues by Patrick Neate
Poetry
Bunny by Selima Hill