The winner is marked with a blue ribbon.
2005 The winner was announced on 15 October 2005. Special commendations were awarded to
Michael Molnar and
Robin Kemball. •
Oliver Ready for
The Prussian Bride, by
Yuri Buida (
Dedalus Books, 2002) •
Hugh Aplin for
The Fatal Eggs, by
Mikhail Bulgakov (
Hesperus Press, 2003) •
Andrew Bromfield for
The Naked Pioneer Girl, by (
Serpent's Tail, 2004) •
Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler and
Olga Meerson for
Soul, by
Andrei Platonov (
Harvill Press, 2003) •
Arch Tait for
Hurramabad, by
Andrei Volos (
Glas, 2001) •
Robert Maguire for
Dead Souls, by
Nikolai Gogol (
Penguin Books, 2004)
2007 The winner was announced on 25 May 2007. A special commendation was awarded to Robert Chandler, in particular for his translation of
The Railway by
Hamid Ismailov and also for his lifetime oeuvre of translations. •
Joanne Turnbull for
7 Stories, by
Sigismund Krzhizhanovsky (
Glas, 2006) •
Anthony Briggs for
War and Peace, by
Leo Tolstoy (
Penguin Books, 2005) •
Hugh Aplin for
The Death of Ivan Ilyich, by
Leo Tolstoy (
Hesperus Press, 2005) •
Arch Tait for
Sonechka: a novella and stories, by
Ludmila Ulitskaya (Schocken Books, 2005) •
Anne O. Fisher for ''Ilf and Petrov's American Road Trip: The 1935 Travelogue for two Soviet writers'' by
Ilya Ilf and
Evgeny Petrov (
Princeton Architectural Press & Cabinet Books, 2006)
2009 The winner was announced on 25 May 2009. •
Hugh Aplin for
Romance with Cocaine, by
Mikhail Ageyev (
Hesperus Press, 2008) •
Ignat Avsey for
Humiliated and Insulted, by
Fyodor Dostoevsky (One World Classics, 2008) •
Nick Allen for ''
One Soldier's War in Chechnya'', by
Andrei Babchenko (
Portobello Books, 2007) •
Andrew Bromfield for
The Sacred Book of the Werewolf, by
Victor Pelevin (
Faber and Faber, 2008) •
Sasha Dugdale for
Birdsong on the Seabed, by
Elena Shvarts (Bloodaxe Books, 2008) •
Jamey Gambrell for
Ice, by
Vladimir Sorokin (
New York Review of Books, 2007) •
Amanda Love Darragh for
Iramifications, by
Maria Galina (
Glas, 2008)
2012 The winner was announced on 23 May 2012. Also, a special commendation for the variety and quality of their translations was awarded to Hugh and Galya Aplin. •
Margaret Winchell for
The Cathedral Clergy: A Chronicle, by
Nikolay Leskov (Slavica, 2010) •
Konstantin Gurevich and
Helen Anderson for
The Golden Calf, by
Ilya Ilf and
Evgeny Petrov (
Open Letter Books, 2009) •
John Elsworth for
Petersburg, by
Andrei Bely (Pushkin Press, 2009) •
Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler for
The Road, by
Vasily Grossman (
MacLehose Press, 2010) •
Galya Aplin and
Hugh Aplin for
The Village, by
Ivan Bunin (Oneworld Classics, 2009)
2014 The shortlist was announced on 28 February 2014. The winner was announced on 21 March 2014. •
Andrew Bromfield for
Happiness is Possible, by
Oleg Zaionchkovsky (
And Other Stories, 2012) •
Angela Livingstone for ''Phaedra; with New Year's Letter and Other Long Poems'', by
Marina Tsvetaeva (Angel Classics, 2013) • Peter Daniels for
Selected Poems, by
Vladislav Khodasevich (Angel Classics, 2013) •
Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler for
Russian Magic Tales from Pushkin to Platonov, edited by Robert Chandler (
Penguin Classics, 2012) •
Anthony Briggs for
The Queen of Spades by
Alexander Pushkin (Pushkin Press, 2012) ==References==