The New Zealand Herald

Two winners break Booker rules

Frustratio­n as Atwood and Evaristo share literature prize

- Anita Singh

The big question before this year’s Booker Prize announceme­nt was whether Margaret Atwood’s thriller would win. On the night, what happened behind the scenes provided the greatest plot twist of all. In a flouting of the rules, the jury decided to split the prize between two books, Atwood’s The Testaments and Bernardine Evaristo’s Girl, Woman, Other.

Told in no uncertain terms that the rule book allowed only one winner, Peter Florence, chairman of the judges, refused to give way. It culminated in a press conference in which Florence announced the decision while the exasperate­d director of the prize, Gaby Wood, stood by.

“They have actively broken the rules. It’s not that we accommodat­ed the jury, it’s that the jury actively chose to reject the rules,” said Wood. “They effectivel­y staged a sit-in in the judging room.”

Over five hours discussion­s between the jury and Wood, acting intermedia­ry for the trustees, went back and forth.

The jury won the day. Wood insisted she was resigned, rather than angry, about the “gesture”.

She said: “There was nothing unclear about my communicat­ion of the rules but that was the choice they made and you have to respect it.”

She added previous juries had entertaine­d the idea of splitting the prize, but accepted it was not allowed. It was the most dramatic act of Booker insurrecti­on since Philip Larkin, the 1976 chairman, threatened to jump out of the window if his favourite book didn’t win.

Florence, director of the Hay Festival, said Extinction Rebellion protesters in the streets close to the Guildhall provided inspiratio­n. “Today of all days, when rebellion is in the air — maybe we were a little moved by that,” he said. “We were told quite firmly that the rules state that you can only have one winner. And as we have managed the jury all the way through on the principle of consensus, our consensus was that it was our decision to flout the rules and divide this year’s prize to celebrate two winners.”

The prize has been split before — between Nadine Gordimer and Stanley Middleton in 1974; and Michael Ondaatje and Barry Unsworth in 1992. Rules were changed in 1993 to require one winner only.

Atwood’s novel is a sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale and has shifted close to 180,000 copies since release last month.

Evaristo’s novel sold 3976 copies. She is the first British woman of colour to win and her book tells stories about black women across the generation­s.

 ??  ?? Margaret Attwood (left) and Bernardine Evaristo have won the Booker Prize.
Margaret Attwood (left) and Bernardine Evaristo have won the Booker Prize.
 ?? Photos / AP, Sharon Wallace ??
Photos / AP, Sharon Wallace

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