AN AUTHOR has won an award for her debut book. 

Alice Ash, from Brighton, won the Edge Hill reader’s choice award for her first short story collection.

Paradise Block was selected by students and staff at Edge Hill university, Lancashire.

Alice will now receive £1,000 prize money for the book, published during the pandemic.

The Argus: Brighton's Alice Ash took the £1,000 prizeBrighton's Alice Ash took the £1,000 prize

“I sometimes felt like maybe I’d dreamt the whole thing,” said Alice.

“Hearing that I’d won the prize made the whole experience come alive for me - it has been incredibly fulfilling and I’m so grateful to the readers for selecting my book.”

The awards were founded in 2006, and are the only annual group of prizes for published, single-authored collections of short stories in the UK.

“As the Edge Hill Prize was the most prestigious short story prize I’d ever heard of, I wanted to nervously throw my hat in and I’m so glad I did because this has been a very happy experience for me,” added Alice.

READ MORE: Abdulrazak Gurnah from Brighton wins literature Nobel prize

Paradise Block comprises 13 disturbing tales of a surreal apartment building’s residents, for whom “sales calls for luxury coffins provide a welcome distraction.”

Author Kevin Barry scooped the main Edge Hill Prize, with That Old Country Music.