The Press

Historic Booker win for Beatty

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BRITAIN: Paul Beatty’s The Sellout, a stinging satire of race and class in the United States, won the Man Booker Prize yesterday the first time an American has taken the prestigiou­s fiction award.

Judges said Beatty’s provocativ­e book was a satire to rank with the classics, and as timely as the evening news.

Historian Amanda Foreman, who chaired the judging panel, said the book ‘‘plunges into the heart of contempora­ry American society, and with absolutely savage wit - the kind I haven’t seen since (Jonathan) Swift or (Mark) Twain.’’

The Sellout is set in a rundown Los Angeles suburb called Dickens, where the residents include the last survivor of the Little Rascals and the book’s narrator, Bonbon, an African-American man on trial at the US Supreme Court for attempting to reinstate slavery and racial segregatio­n. The book has been likened to the comedy of Richard Pryor and Chris Rock, and Beatty goes where many authors fear to tread. Racial stereotype­s, offensive speech and police violence are all subject to his scathing eye.

Beatty was awarded the US$61,000 (NZ$85,000) prize by Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, during a black-tie ceremony at London’s medieval Guildhall.

Beatty acknowledg­ed that The Sellout was a hard book - both to read and to write. ‘‘I don’t want to get all dramatic, like writing saved my life,’’ said 54-year-old Beatty, who has written three other novels. ‘‘But writing’s given me a life. I’m just trying to create space for myself - hopefully that creates space for others.’’

 ??  ?? Paul Beatty
Paul Beatty

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