The Barbellion Prize is a British literary award "dedicated to the furtherance of ill and disabled voices in writing".
[1] It is awarded annually to a writer, in any genre, who has a chronic illness or is living with a disability.
[2][3][4][5] The prize was founded in 2020 by Jake Goldsmith, who has cystic fibrosis and whose memoir Neither Weak nor Obtuse was published in 2022 by Sagging Meniscus Books (ISBN 978-1952386398).
Eligibility is "predicated on the author's presentation of life with a long-term chronic illness or disability ... that may substantially define one's life", and "Authors - such as those in a carer's capacity - who themselves are not disabled may be considered for the prize if their work is truly exceptional as an articulation of life with illness" but they will be given lower priority.
[1] The winner receives £1,000, a glass trophy, and a copy of Barbellion's The Journal of a Disappointed Man.