Debut novelist Claire Lynch has received the 2025 Nero Gold Prize for her book A Family Matter, marking the first time a debut has claimed the overall award. The novel draws from the experiences of lesbian mothers in the 1980s who often lost custody of their children. The prize, worth £30,000, recognizes outstanding books published in the UK and Ireland.
Claire Lynch's debut novel, A Family Matter, published in May 2025, has been awarded the 2025 Nero Gold Prize, the top honor from the Nero Book Awards. This prestigious UK literary prize, which honors the best books from the UK and Ireland, selected Lynch's work from four category winners, making it the first debut novel to win overall.
The story alternates between 1982 and the present day, centering on Maggie, who seeks answers about her mother's disappearance from her childhood. Maggie's mother, Dawn, faces a custody battle after her relationship with another woman is revealed, reflecting the prejudices of the era. Lynch drew inspiration from real cases, noting that up to 90% of lesbian mothers lost custody in 1980s divorce proceedings.
In an interview on BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour, Lynch explained the societal pressures: “There was pressure put upon families to say, the best thing to do in this situation is to remove this source of embarrassment and shame, to take this mother away from the family.” She added, “The intention was, in the best case scenario, the child would be very young, they would forget, and the family could sort of reform around the scar, if you like, and carry on as if that woman had never been there.”
Lynch incorporated details from actual court transcripts and newspaper reports into the novel's fictional custody hearing, stating, “The stuff in the court cases – I couldn’t make it worse, to be honest, so I brought things from real court cases and put them together.”
The Nero Book Awards feature categories in fiction, non-fiction, debut fiction, and children’s fiction, with each winner receiving £5,000 before competing for the £30,000 Gold Prize. This year, A Family Matter took the debut fiction category, while Seascraper by Benjamin Wood won fiction, Death of an Ordinary Man by Sarah Perry took non-fiction, and My Soul, A Shining Tree by Jamila Gavin claimed children’s fiction.
Judging panel chair Nick Hornby praised the book: “We admired its wry humour, its deft storytelling, and its love for all its characters, even those who behave in ways we find hard to understand, and who make choices which we would regard as morally questionable.” He noted, “It is both readable and intelligent, and it offers hope and consolation. We believe that this novel will be read and thought about for years to come.”
Lynch, formerly a literature teacher at Brunel University of London and now an honorary professor of English and creative writing, lives in Windsor with her wife and three daughters. Reacting to the win, she said, “I’m genuinely knocked off my feet,” adding that the prize provides “a bit of permission” to affirm her as a writer.