The 2006 Diagram Prize for the Oddest Title of the Year
The winner of this prize has now been announced in the Bookseller and is:
The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North America: A Guide
to Field Identification by Julian Montague, published by Harry N Abrams.
There were 5,500 votes in all on theBookseller.com, more than ever before.
The runner-up was Tattooed Mountain Women and Spoon Boxes of Daghestan.
The shortlist for the 2006 prize has received unprecedented
international coverage, from the Orlando Sentinel to the Hindu. In the UK
listeners were bemused by the Today programme running a competition for
listeners to imagine the titles were for a novel and to write the opening
paragraphs.
The competition is run by
columnist Horace Bent in the Bookseller (the UK book trade weekly)
with input from dedicated odd title hunters from all over the world. The
prize, set up in association with the Diagram Group, has been running since
1978 and is a joyous celebration of the barmy side of publishing.
As always,
the shortlist included some memorably odd titles, but
all had to be guaranteed to be authentic. So it's been a tough job choosing
what goes on the shortlist for the very weird 2006 line-up.
The 2006 shortlist
How Green Were the Nazis?
D Di Mascio's Delicious Ice Cream: D Di Mascio of Coventry - an Ice Cream
company of Repute, with an Interesting and Varied Fleet of Ice Cream Vans
The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North America: A Guide to Field
Identification
Tattoed Mountain Women and Spoon Boxes of Daghestan
Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Seaweed Symposium
Better Never to Have Been: the Harm of Coming into Existence
The 2005 Winner
How People Who Don't Know They're Dead Attach Themselves to Unsuspecting
Bystanders and What to Do About It
So how do you think this year's winner lines up alongside glorious winners of the past,
such as 2005's Bombproof Your Horse, 2002's wonderful Living with Crazy Buttocks
and the original classic Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Nude Mice?
(Please note that, contrary to what you may think, all entries for the Prize
must be genuine titles of books actually being published - no cheating allowed)
© Chris Holifield 2007