Finlandia Prize

Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This Source

The Finlandia Prize is the most prestigious literary award in Finland. It is awarded annually to the author of the best Finnish novel, children's book, and non-fiction book. The award sum (as of 2005) is 26,000 euros (previously 100,000 Finnish Marks).

Finlandia Award

Winners of the prize for best novel
Year Author Novel Language
1984
Erno Paasilinna Yksinäisyys ja uhma Finnish
1985
Jörn Donner Far och son Swedish
1986
Sirkka Turkka Tule takaisin, pikku Sheba Finnish
1987
Helvi Hämäläinen Sukupolveni unta Finnish
1988
Gösta Ågren Jär Swedish
1989
Markku Envall Samurai nukkuu Finnish
1990
Olli Jalonen Isäksi ja tyttäreksi Finnish
1991
Arto Melleri Elävien kirjoissa Finnish
1992
Leena Krohn Matemaattisia olioita tai jaettuja unia Finnish
1993
Bo Carpelan Urwind Swedish
1994
Eeva Joenpelto Tuomari Müller, hieno mies Finnish
1995
Hannu Mäkelä Mestari Finnish
1996
Irja Rane Naurava neitsyt Finnish
1997
Antti Tuuri Lakeuden kutsu Finnish
1998
Pentti Holappa Ystävän muotokuva Finnish
1999
Kristina Carlson Maan ääreen Finnish
2000
Johanna Sinisalo Ennen päivänlaskua ei voi Finnish
2001
Hannu Raittila Canal Grande Finnish
2002
Kari Hotakainen Juoksuhaudantie Finnish
2003
Pirkko Saisio Punainen erokirja Finnish
2004
Helena Sinervo Runoilijan talossa Finnish
2005
Bo Carpelan Berg Swedish
2006
Kjell Westö Där vi en gång gått Swedish
2007
Hannu Väisänen Toiset kengät Finnish

Finlandia Junior award

The Finlandia Junior prize is awarded for children's and young adult literature. Winners:

Tieto-Finlandia award

The Tieto-Finlandia Award is considered Finland's most significant non-fiction award. Winners include:



Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia © 2001-2006 Wikipedia contributors (Disclaimer)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Thursday January 17, 2008 at 11:58:27 PST (GMT -0800)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation