Nelson Mail

Nobel winner credits Dylan

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BRITAIN: Kazuo Ishiguro has become the first British winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature since 2007.

The 62-year-old author only found out that he had won literature’s greatest accolade when his agency called to say it had heard something rather extraordin­ary on the news. He initially dismissed it as ‘‘fake news’’, and it was some time before confirmati­on came from the Swedish Academy, which awards the prize.

In the meantime, he had to tell his wife. ‘‘She went to the hairdresse­r - this momentous moment - and she was just about to have the tints done when I phoned.’’

Ishiguro’s is an uncontrove­rsial win, unlike Bob Dylan’s last year, which baffled many. But he said Dylan had been a brilliant choice.

‘‘He was the single greatest hero for me when I was growing up. Without Dylan’s words and music, I probably wouldn’t have been a writer.’’

Born in Nagasaki, Japan, Ishiguro moved with his family to Guildford, Surrey when he was 5.

A graduate of the University of East Anglia’s creative writing course, he wrote The Remains of the Day in four weeks. It won the Man Booker Prize in 1989, and a 1993 film adaptation received eight Oscar nomination­s.

The last British winner was Doris Lessing. Others include Harold Pinter, V S Naipaul and William Golding.

- Telegraph Group

 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ?? Police officers examine the entrance to a 500-metre tunnel leading from a house to the main vault of the Bank of Brazil in Sao Paulo.
PHOTOS: REUTERS Police officers examine the entrance to a 500-metre tunnel leading from a house to the main vault of the Bank of Brazil in Sao Paulo.
 ??  ?? Kazuo Ishiguro
Kazuo Ishiguro

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