The 2025 Awards
The 2025 Awards

Cressida Cowell with the 2025 award winners from Gloucesteshire schools.
Public Libraries
Coleford Library scooped the top prize for public libraries—a £5,000 award and the Willan’s cup—to establish a library in the new Forest of Dean Community Hospital,supporting older adults, many living with dementia.
Oakley Interactive Space and the Matson, Quedgeley and Tuffley group each received £1,000 for innovative projects ranging from immersive book clubs to an Adventurers League using games like Dungeons & Dragons to spark a love of reading.
Schools
Farmor’s School (Fairford) was awarded £4,000 for literacy-boosting projects across the school.
Severnbanks Primary School (Lydney) won £2,000 to create a dedicated reading area, with extra support from the Trust to connect with local partners.
Kingswood Primary and Tredworth Infants and Nursery Academy each received £1,000, the former for library renovations, the latter for bilingual books and EAL pens.
The ceremony wrapped up with Young Person’s awards for Ted Holloway (age 15, Dursley Library) and Emily Stevenson (age 16, Coleford Library), recognising their passion for reading and their contribution to their local communities.
Thanks to the David Vaisey Award, we successfully combined creativity and literacy to bring families together, foster a love for learning, and expand the reach of library services into underrepresented and isolated areas. Planning for next year’s festival is already underway, promising even greater impact.
Thank you so much for your recognition of the importance of this and the opportunities winning this award has given us: even after several months and a lot of work we are still so excited and passionate about the project.
2025 Judges and shortlist
John Dougherty (Chair) is the award-winning author of over thirty books for children, including fiction, picture-books, poetry, and educational reading scheme content. From 2013-2015, John chaired the Society of Authors’ Children’s Writers & Illustrators Group. He was one of the first Patrons of Reading in the UK and is a Founding Patron of the Chipping Norton Literary Festival. A resident of Stroud since 2004, John has been involved with the Stroud Book Festival since its inception and is a fervent supporter of, and campaigner for, a strong public library service.

Dr Rachel Sargeant is an author of suspense fiction, including the Gloucestershire Crime Series. She holds a PhD from the University of Birmingham and is a judge for the Henshaw Press Short Story Competitions.
As a chartered librarian, she oversaw the design of two Gloucestershire school libraries and implemented study skills and reading for pleasure initiatives. Before moving to Gloucester, she taught English at a university in Germany. Previously, she ran a group of libraries and the mobile service in the London Borough of Bromley, led a lifelong learning project for Shropshire Libraries, and set up the Voices from Europe Festival, the forerunner to the Richmond upon Thames Literature Festival.

Hereward Corbett was born on a farm in Sussex and as a child spent many hours in Hastings Public Library. He has worked in bookselling since the late 1980s, and currently runs the two Yellow-Lighted Bookshops in Tetbury and Nailsworth. He is a slow but persistent reader, and is passionate about words, stories, and how they enable people to understand and change their lives.

Julian Hasler is an arable farmer living near Tetbury; with a degree in Sciences and English Literature he has been a voracious reader from an early age.

Peter Hunt is Professor Emeritus in English and Children’s Literature at Cardiff University, UK, and Adjunct Professor at Dublin City University, Eire.
Peter was the first Professor of Children’s Literature in a UK university. He has lectured at over 150 universities in 24 countries, and has written or edited 38 books and more than 500 papers and reviews on the subject. His books have been translated into Arabic, Chinese, Danish, Greek, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Portuguese (Brazil) and Serbian.
Awards include the Brothers Grimm Award for services to children’s literature, from the International Institute for Children’s Literature, Osaka, and the Anne Devereaux Jordan Award for Distinguished Service to Children’s Literature from the Children’s Literature Association (USA). He was a member of the initial Board of Trustees for Seven Stories, the children’s book centre in Newcastle.
Over the past few years he has been a Visiting Professor at Trinity College Dublin, Unversità Ca’Foscari Venice, Newcastle University (UK), and Hollins University (USA). His most recent books include The Making of Lewis Carroll’s Alice (2020), and Alice’s Oxford (April 2025). He is currently one of the editors of The Routledge Companion to Young Adult Literature.
He has four daughters and nine grandchildren, and lives with his extremely long-suffering wife in Horsley, just outside Nailsworth.

Tash Hyde is originally from North Lincolnshire via Derby & Toulouse. She moved to Gloucestershire in 2022 to work for Read for Good, a UK wide reading for pleasure charity based in Nailsworth.
Tash was previously a children’s librarian for Derbyshire County Council, she worked as a Sure Start Librarian doing outreach to encourage families to fall in love with books & promote the benefits of libraries. Now Books & Libraries Lead, she leads on pilot project work with schools in Gloucestershire, liaison with publishers including books reviews and events, manages Brilliant Box of Books and is also a judge for Oscar’s Book Prize.


