The Desmond Elliott Prize was inaugurated at the bequest of Desmond Elliott, who died in August 2003. He stipulated that his literary estate should be invested in a charitable trust that would fund a literary award "to enrich the careers of new writers". The prize was therefore dedicated to supporting and celebrating aspiring authors and their fiction. The Desmond Elliott Prize was launched in 2007 as a biennial award for a first novel published in the UK. The inaugural prize was won by
Nikita Lalwani for her novel,
Gifted, in June 2008. After the successful launch of the prize, the trustees decided to make it an annual award.
Edward Hogan won the prize in 2009 for his novel
Blackmoor, Ali Shaw the 2010 prize for his novel
The Girl with Glass Feet and
Anjali Joseph in 2011 for her novel
Saraswati Park. The prize is administered by Emma Manderson and the trustees of
The Desmond Elliott Charitable Trust, a UK
charitable foundation. The Trust is chaired by Dallas Manderson, former Group Sales Director of the
Orion Publishing Group. He is joined by Christine Berry, a partner in the charities group at Taylor Vinters, a Cambridge-based law firm, and Liz Thomson, an arts journalist and author. Both Dallas and Christine worked with Desmond Elliott at Arlington Books. == Judging ==