, 2011 In 1967, the publisher
Rabén & Sjögren established an annual
literary prize, the
Astrid Lindgren Prize, to mark her 60th birthday. The prize—40,000
Swedish kronor—is awarded to a Swedish-language children's writer every year on Lindgren's birthday in November. In 1995, she was awarded the
Illis quorum gold medal by the Swedish government. On her 90th birthday, she was pronounced
International Swede of the Year 1997. In its entry on Scandinavian fantasy,
The Encyclopedia of Fantasy named Lindgren the foremost Swedish contributor to modern children's fantasy. Its entry on Lindgren stated that "Her niche in children's fantasy remains both secure and exalted. Her stories and images can never be forgotten." Following Lindgren's death, the
government of Sweden instituted the
Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award in her memory. The award is the world's largest monetary award for children's and youth literature, in the amount of five million Swedish kronor. The collection of Lindgren's original manuscripts in the
National Library of Sweden in Stockholm was added to
UNESCO's
Memory of the World International Register in 2005. On 6 April 2011, Sweden's central bank
Sveriges Riksbank announced that Lindgren's portrait would feature on the 20
kronor banknote, beginning in 2014–2015. The banknote had before that featured the Swedish author
Selma Lagerlöf. In 2018,
Pernille Fischer Christensen directed the film
Becoming Astrid (Swedish:
Unga Astrid), a
biographical drama about Lindgren's early life.
Nobel Prize in Literature In
1972, Lindgren was nominated for the
Nobel Prize in Literature by German literary critic Klaus Doderer and Austrian librarian Josef Stummvoll.
Asteroid Lindgren Asteroid
3204 Lindgren, discovered in 1978 by Soviet astronomer
Nikolai Chernykh, was named after her. The name of the Swedish
microsatellite Astrid 1, launched on 24 January 1995, was originally selected only as a common
Swedish female name, but within a short time it was decided to name the payload instruments after characters in Lindgren's books: PIPPI (Prelude in Planetary Particle Imaging), EMIL (Electron Measurements – In-situ and Lightweight), and MIO (Miniature Imaging Optics).
Astrid's Wellspring In memory of Lindgren, a memorial sculpture was created next to her childhood home, named ("Astrid's Wellspring" in English). It is situated at the spot where Lindgren first heard
fairy tales. The sculpture consists of an artistic representation of a young person's head (1.37 m high), flattened on top, in the corner of a square pond, and, just above the water, a ring of rosehip thorns. Lindgren's childhood home is near the statue and open to the public. Just from Astrid's Wellspring is a museum in her memory. The author is buried in Vimmerby, where the
Astrid Lindgren's World theme park is located. The children's museum
Junibacken, in Stockholm, was opened in June 1996 with the main theme of the permanent exhibition being devoted to Lindgren; at the heart of the museum is a theme train ride through the world of Lindgren's novels. File:Sagornas död.jpg|
Källa Astrid (Astrid's Wellspring) by File:Astridmuseum.jpg|Lindgren Museum File:Astridgrave.jpg|Lindgren gravesite File:Staty av Astrid Lindgren.jpg|Lindgren at her typewriter. Statue created by
Marie-Louise Ekman, in the centre of Vimmerby == Works ==