Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Michael Ondaatje’s novel The English Patient wins ‘best of 50’ prize

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

LONDON: The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje, set in India among other locations, has been crowned the best work of fiction over the last five decades of the Man Booker Prize, prevailing over VS Naipaul’s In A Free State and three works.

The Golden Man Booker, the one-off award marking the Man Booker Prize’s 50th anniversar­y celebratio­ns, was chosen by the public and revealed on Sunday. Before the books faced a month-long public vote on the Man Booker website, all 51 previous winners were also considered by a panel of five judges, each of whom was asked to read the winning novels from one decade of the prize’s history. The judges were Robert Mccrum, who chose In A Free State by VS Naipaul for the 1970s, Lemn Sissay, who chose Moon Tiger by Penelope Lively for the 1980s, Kamila Shamsie, who chose The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje for the 1990s, Simon Mayo, who chose Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel for the noughties, and Hollie Mcnish, who chose Lincoln In The Bardo by George Saunders for the 2010s.

Shamsie said: "The English Patient is that rare novel which gets under your skin and insists you return to it time and again, always yielding a new surprise or delight. It moves seamlessly between the epic and the intimate – one moment you’re in looking at the vast sweep of the desert and the next moment watching a nurse place a piece of plum in a patient’s mouth.

“That movement is mirrored in the way your thoughts, while reading it, move between large themes – war, loyalty, love – to tiny shifts in the relationsh­ips between characters. It’s intricatel­y (and rewardingl­y) structured, beautifull­y written, with great humanity written into every page.

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