2025 NEMBA Award Winners

We are pleased to announce the Winners and Honorable Mention NEMBA Awards for books published in 2024.

At a public event on Sunday, Nov. 9, Lake Superior Writers announced the winners of the 2025 Northeastern  Minnesota Book Awards. Reading teams chose a winner and an honorable mention in each of the remaining categories. The winners each receive a $200 cash prize. The winning author and the honorable mention receive a beveled glass award as well as 100 NEMBA book seals.

NOTE: Nominations for the 2026 NEMBA, honoring books published in 2025, will be accepted beginning February 1, 2025.

Listed below are the honorable mention and winners in each category with descriptions written by the reading teams:


Winner in Nonfiction/Memoir

Fur Trade Nation: An Ojibwe’s Graphic History

by Carl Gawboy
published by Animikii Mazina’iganan: Thunderbird Press

A graphic history of pen and ink drawings set largely in northeastern Minnesota, Fur Trade  Nation explores the history of the fur trade era from the perspective of the Ojibwe people. The author uses  humor in explaining Ojibwe traditions and the obstacles the indigenous people faced. Customs and lifestyle  are explored with the reader learning everything from harvesting wild rice to building a birchbark canoe.  The exploitation of the indigenous people by the European white settlers is also explored. This was a very  enjoyable book to read and learn from and was our unanimous choice for the award. 


Honorable Mention in Nonfiction

Gunflint Falling : Blowdown in the Boundary Waters

by Cary J. Griffith
published by University of Minnesota Press

A well-researched narrative of the events before, during, and after the 1999 blowdown on the  Gunflint Trail and the BWCA, Gunflint Falling is an unexpected page turner! A rare storm called a dericho  results in both human drama and a devastating environmental impact in northeastern Minnesota. A compelling  introduction to the people involved, as well as personal accounts of campers, rescue personnel, and others  affected by the storm sets the stage for the onset of the storm and the devastating aftermath. 


Winner in Fiction

Sister Lumberjack

by Candace Simar
published by North Star Press of St. Cloud

Sister Lumberjack by Candace Simar intertwines three compelling character voices in a tale set in the  lumberjack era of northern Minnesota. These three very different characters find themselves in a rough  lumber camp, a place of last hope for lumberjacks who’ve been turned away from more upstanding camps.  Here a recently widowed woman working as camp cook in an effort to save her farm from bank repossession,  a blacklisted logger with the tendency to drink away his wages and a feisty Benedictine nun from Duluth  attempting to introduce an early version of health insurance to loggers come together during a memorable  winter in the north woods. 


Honorable Mention in Fiction

The Day the World Burned

by Kristina Shuey
published by Pine County Chronicles

Kristina Shuey‘s The Day the World Burned offers an intimate portrayal of the Great Hinckley  Fire. The narrative alternates between Anna and Karl as they learn to navigate immigrant life in Hinckley’s  early sawmill days until they are tested by the fire itself and its ensuing effects. Shuey immerses readers in an  unforgettable story of one of Minnesota’s most tragic historical events. 


Winner in Poetry

Natural Wonders 

by Patrick Stevens
published by Finns Way Books

 In this collection of poetry that is lyrically evocative and deeply appreciative, the reader joins  Patrick Stevens on a walk in the woods of northern Minnesota. Intertwined with lush and rich descriptions  of forest plants and creatures are the poet’s own remembrances and reflections that parallel the circularity of  seasons with our own lives. We are drawn into the honesty and candor in Stevens’ poetry, written a profound  gratitude for the magical gift of our human existence as part of the magic of the natural world. 


Honorable Mention in Poetry

Cotton Grass: New and Selected Poems of the North

by Bart Sutter
published by Nodin Press

Bart Sutter’s collection of new and selected poems includes some of his very early work as well  as recent and new, a portrait of poet and Minnesota that is as masterful as it is engaging. 


Winner in Youth Literature

Just Keep Walking

by Erin Soderberg Downing
published by Scholastic Press

This story of a mother and daughter grapple with healing through the challenge of a 100- mile wilderness hike speaks strongly of our region. The familiarity of the terrain was evident – we’ve all seen that fog rolling in on the North Shore and know those low lying areas where the mosquitoes are terrible. The  characters introduced were well-written and felt organic to the challenge of walking the Superior Trail. A  thoroughly enjoyable read. 


Honorable Mention in Youth Literature

Belzi’s Blizzard

by Katharine Johnson
published by Silver Fox Books

In Belzi’s Blizzard, a girl learns to embrace the ways of her Finnish grandmother, and together  they learn to deal with her absent mother’s dark past. Written with care and delicacy, the book handles a hard  subject of separations in families and the introduction of the mother’s journal opened up dialogue and the  broader story.


NEMBA book seals













The NEMBA Awards are presented by Lake Superior Writers.

Operating support is made possible in part by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Arrowhead Regional Arts Council, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.