News | September 9, 2025


Laurane Reine-Adelaïde Wins David Ruggles Book Collecting Prize

David Ruggles Prize

Laurane Reine-Adelaïde

The fourth annual David Ruggles Prize to support and encourage international young book collectors of color has been awarded to 
Laurane Reine-Adelaïde for her collection on Martinique.

Reflecting the everyday lives of the Caribbean island's people, her collection is particularly rich in material on cooking and fashion. While Reine-Adelaïde - who also recieves $1,000 for her win - comes from Martinique, she is a long-time resident of France.

"There are still many things I don’t know or haven’t experienced," she said. "But every book, every object in my collection brings me closer to my roots. That’s the heart of my collection, to surround myself with the sounds, images, flavors, and knowledge of Martinique so that I can feel more connected to my land and to my people."

Judges praised the mix of the canonical, the local, and the personal, and appreciated the effort required to source relevant material without relying on bookseller expertise. 

Anushmita Mohanty
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David Ruggles Prize

Anushmita Mohanty

Kaveh Bahar
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David Ruggles Prize

Kaveh Bahar

The $500 second prize went to Anushmita Mohanty for her collection documenting the diversity of children's literature in India where Belgian comic character Tintin is a staple of many Indian childhoods. "Such transnational circulation reveals how Indian childhood reading is shaped by a mix of indigenous and global narratives, popular culture, and publishing histories," she said.

From picture books to novels, through English and Hindi and Bengali, Mohanty's collection of more than 200 titles traces the evolution of this vast literary landscape through the country's post-Independence history. Bringing together overlooked ephemera, work in regional languages, and the products of small presses, the collection offers an alternate history of Indian reading practices, rooted not in English-language publishing alone but in translingual, regional, and grassroots circulations.

Judges said they appreciated the blend of the personal, political, and historical, and could easily imagine the collection in a library.

Kaveh Bahar scooped the $250 third prize for his collection on death and attachment. Bahar, still a teenager, was inspired at the age of seven by the books and zines he found on his grandmother's shelves. Beyond books and ephemera, which date back to 1530, his collection includes funerary objects, hairwork jewelry, and even a Victorian mourning bodice. Judges commented on Bahar's "connection between the objects and the books, layers of meaning" and his impressive sourcing methods.

Previous winners of the David Ruggles Prize include Oscar Salguero, Jordan Dean Ross, and Ariana Valderrama.