The Unbearable Lightness of...Bean
The Costa Book Award for Book of the Year 2006 is announced on February 7, amidst what, by book awards standards, can only be described as a blaze of publicity. If this sounds like a new, peripheral occasion to you (which it did to me) you would in fact be wrong. The Costa Book Award is the heir to the Whitbread Prize. Only, it sounds worse on two fronts. Firstly, Costa is blatantly commercial; Whitbread is a company that owns lots of commercial brands, including Costa, and hence sounds as though it could be the name of a person, like the Nobel Prize. It gives the illusion of freedom from commercial concerns. Secondly - and this could just be me, Book Award sounds like a copy of Postman Pat given at a primary
examines the relationship between coffee, literature and commerce in anticipation of next week’s Costa Prize
school. A prize is something more substantial, something to be striven for and won; the well-earned spoils of a literary war.
However, the Costa Book Award it is and the Costa Book Award it shall remain until another corporation sees fit to don a literary mantle. And it is this, rather than the title, that I really want to question. Should this prize, this book award, indeed should any such event be sponsored by a profit making entity? Are these awards anything more than a bookish beauty parade, devoid of any meaning bar that of publicity? Most authors aren’t good-looking enough to set a red carpet alight; unless Zadie Smith is going to turn up in Prada to every book prize around. Call me old-fashioned, but these prizes, and lit-glitz in general, have a danger of privileging style over substance. And, frankly, in the day and age of the Richard and Judy Book Club and face-lifted, Bridget Jones-friendly Jane Austen novels, do books need more of that?
To return to Costa, the relationship between coffee chains and books has become an

Obviously, Whitbread PLC has sensed a relationship between books and coffee which it seeks to cement. This is, of course, why it has allowed its coffee shop brand Costa to become associated with such a prestigious prize. But we should not ascribe purely mercenary motivations to all companies. Some do seem to want to try and take on a degree of social responsibility. And if I’m being hopelessly naïve and they profit from everything they do, does it really matter?
It seems to me that with the Costa Book Awards, everyone’s a winner (unless, of course, you only make the shortlist). Overall, if people are encouraged to pick up a book and read, it can only be a good thing. Who knows, perhaps when they finish reading it, they will be less inclined to visit Starbucks anyway.