A Room Above a Shop by Anthony Shapland named Hay Festival Book of the Year 2025

A Room Above a Shop by Anthony Shapland has been named Hay Festival Book of the Year 2025 after hundreds of book lovers nominated their favourite titles of the year online. 

A tender and resonant love story, the novel unfolds in South Wales against the backdrop of Section 28, the age of consent debate and the HIV and AIDS crisis, as two quiet men form a tentative connection neither knows where it might lead. 

Anthony Shapland grew up in Bargoed, South Wales. He is a writer and artist, and founder of g39, an artist-led space in Cardiff. His short story Foolscap was shortlisted for the Rhys Davies Award, and he was selected for the Hay Festival Writers at Work programme in 2023. This is his debut novel.

Hay Festival CEO Julie Finch said: 

“At the end of each year, we ask our audience to tell us about the books they couldn’t put down. The resulting submissions are a varied and engaging snapshot of the year’s most impactful fiction, non-fiction and poetry. A Room Above a Shop was one of the most talked about books at Hay Festival 2025 – a love story that shines light on one of Wales’ hidden histories from an immensely talented storyteller. We are delighted to celebrate it as our Book of the Year. M and B will stay with you long after you turn the final page.” 

Anthony Shapland said:

“It has been a year of surprises, and this is no exception.

“I’m so delighted that A Room Above a Shop has been selected as Hay Festival Book of the Year 2025, joining such an amazing list – I have much to be grateful for. Naivety has probably been a good thing – I didn’t know what was ahead.”

“Hay Festival is where things really started for me. Nervous and keen, along with peers on the Hay Festival Writers at Work scheme in 2023 I first met my agent, Cathryn Summerhayes. Then I was privileged to work with Granta and, in the summer just gone I sat on the Hay Festival Debut Discoveries stage with Cynan Jones. I have had a lot of support and I am truly humbled. 

“And all the while, a few hills away, thirty miles or so South, a story shaped itself – M and B sat on top of a different Gelli, high above their room above a shop.”

Past winners of the Hay Festival Book of the Year have been Chloe Dalton’s Raising Hare last year, Barbara Kingsolver’s Demon Copperhead (2023), Bonnie Garmus’ Lessons in Chemistry (2022), Deborah Levy’s Real Estate (2021), Dara McAnulty’s Diary of a Young Naturalist (2020), Hallie Rubenhold’s The Five (2019), Sarah-Jayne Blakemore’s Inventing Ourselves (2018) and Jackie Morris and Robert Macfarlane’s The Lost Words (2017).