The Jhalak Prize

We're thrilled to partner with the Jhalak Prize – which celebrates books by writers of colour – to help them increase awareness of the prize titles amongst booksellers, who have always been the best champions of books in their local communities.

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The Jhalak Prize

 

The Jhalak Prize 2025

The Jhalak Prize announced its 2025 longlists on 18th March 2025. For the last nine years, the Prize has celebrated the very best books from writers of colour whose work has been published in the United Kingdom and Ireland. This year, the Prize has expanded its list with a dedicated poetry award. 

Discover the longlists for the Jhalak Prose Prize, Jhalak Children's & YA Prize and Jhalak Poetry Prize below: 36 books that the judges describe as 'brilliant', 'moving' and 'finely drawn' and which, in Prize Director Sunny Singh's words, are books 'full of love, hope and joy'.

Key dates:

Shortlists: 22nd April

Winners: 4th June

This year's judging panel includes the two winners of the 2024 Jhalak Prizes, Yepoka Yeebo and Hiba Noor Khan, alongside Jason Allen-Paisant, Malika Booker, Will Harris, Sareeta Domingo, Taran N. Khan, Yassmin Abdel-Magied and Alom Shaha.

2025 also sees the ongoing expansion of the annual Jhalak Art Residency. An artist of colour is commissioned to create a unique work of art that serves as the trophy for the winner of the Jhalak Prize, the Jhalak Poetry Prize and the Jhalak Children's & YA Prize.

The artists in residence for 2025 are:

Khaver Idrees - Jhalak Poetry Prize
Ketna Patel - Jhalak Prose Prize
Lucy Farfort - Jhalak Children's & YA Prize

Visit jhalakprize.com for more about the prize, the Art Residency, and this year's judges.

Want to hear more? Don't forget to follow #JhalakPrize25 and @jhalakprize on social media for updates.

Read more
Jhalak Prose Prize longlist 2025

The Jhalak Prize longlist 2025

Allow Me to Introduce Myself

by Onyi Nwabineli (Magpie)

Determination

by Tawseef Khan (Footnote)

Dispersals

by Jessica J. Lee (Hamish Hamilton)

Everest

by Ashani Lewis (Dialogue)

Manny and the Baby

by Varaidzo (Scribe)

My Friends

by Hisham Matar (Penguin Viking)

Namesake: Reflections on a Warrior Woman

by N.S. Nuseibeh (Canongate)

The Ministry of Time

by Kaliane Bradley (Sceptre)

The Rest of You

by Maame Blue (Verve)

The Strangers

by Ekow Eshun (Hamish Hamilton)

The Thirty Before Thirty List

by Tasneem Abdur-Rashid (Zaffre)

Where We Come From: Rap, Home & Hope in Modern Britain,

by Aniefiok Ekpoudom (Faber)

Jhalak CYA Prize longlist 2025

Jhalak Children's & YA Prize longlist 2025

Bringing Back Kay-Kay

by Dev Kothari (Walker)

Flower Block

by Lanisha Butterfield, illustrated by Hoang Giang (Puffin)

It's Time to Hush and Say Goodnight

by Chitra Soundar, illustrated by Sandhya Prabhat (Walker)

King of Nothing

by Nathanael Lessore (Hot Key)

Little Dinosaurs, Big Feelings

by Swapna Haddow, illustrated by Yiting Lee (Magic Cat)

Mayowa and the Sea of Words

by Chibundu Onuzo (Bloomsbury)

Red Sky at Night, Poet's Delight

by Alex Wharton, illustrated by Ian Morris (Firefly Press)

The Boy to Beat the Gods

by Ashley Thorpe (Usborne)

The Gift

by Jii & Nikos Parkes Trepkas (Tate Publishing)

The Hidden Story of Estie Noor

by Nadine Aisha Jassat, illustrated by Sandhya Prabhat (Orion)

The Thread That Connects Us

by Ayaan Mohamud (Usborne)

These Stolen Lives

by Sharada Keats (Scholastic)

Jhalak Poetry Prize longlist 2025

Jhalak Poetry Prize longlist 2025

Adam

by Gboyega Odubanjo (Faber)

Agimat

by Romalyn Ante (Chatto & Windus)

amuk

by Khairani Barokka (Nine Arches Press)

Boiled Owls

by Azad Ashim Sharma (Out-Spoken Press)

Collected Poems

by Mimi Khalvati (Carcanet)

Emotional Support Horse

by Claudine Toutoungi (Carcanet)

Fantasia

by Nisha Ramayya (Granta Poetry)

Horse

by Rushika Wick (Broken Sleep Books)

Self-Portrait with Family

by Amaan Hyder (Nine Arches Press)

Signs, Music

by Raymond Antrobus (Picador Poetry)

The Tattoo Collector

by Tim Tim Chen (Nine Arches Press)

Top Doll

by Karen McCarthy Woolf (Dialogue)

The Jhalak Prize celebrates books by writers of colour and annually awards £1,000 to three winners. The Jhalak Art Residency sees an artist of colour commissioned to create a unique work of art that serves as the trophy for each of the winners of the prizes.

The artists in residence for 2025 are:

Khaver Idrees - Jhalak Poetry Prize
Ketna Patel - Jhalak Prose Prize
Lucy Farfort - Jhalak Children's & YA Prize

Find out more about the Jhalak Art Residency.  

In Spring 2024, The Jhalak Foundation and the Royal Literary Fund’s WritersMosaic launched The Review, an editorially independent, 16-page biannual insert in The Bookseller magazine.

At National Book Tokens, we're thrilled to be partnering with the Jhalak Prize for the fifth year to help them increase awareness of the prize titles amongst booksellers, who have always been the best champions of books in their local communities. By distributing point-of-sale kits and social assets to bookshops, and by amplifying their activities through tailored PR support, we help them to create instore displays and shout about the longlists, shortlists and winners from their online channels and in local press.

"Championing the Jhalak Prize has always been so important for us. It has been an honour to have sponsored two winners, one being a Newham author. Such an important prize."
- Vivian Archer, Newham Bookshop

Previous winners of the Jhalak Prize are Yepoka Yeebo for Anansi's Gold: the Man Who Swindled the World (2024), Travis Alabanza for None of the Above (2023), Sabba Khan for The Roles We Play (2022), Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi for The First Woman (Oneworld) in 2021, Johny Pitts for Afropean: Notes from Black Europe (Penguin) in 2020, Guy Gunaratne for In Our Mad and Furious City (Tinder Press) in 2019, Reni Eddo-Lodge for Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race (Bloomsbury Circus) in 2018 and Jacob Ross for The Bone Readers (Little, Brown) in 2017. Previous winners of the Jhalak Children's & Young Adult Prize are Hiba Noor Khan for Safiyyah's War (2024), Daniella Jawando for When Our Worlds Collided (2023), Maisie Chan Danny Chung Does Not Do Maths (2022) and Patrice Lawrence for Eight Pieces of Silva (2021).

Visit www.jhalakprize.com to learn more.

 

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