Daily Dispatch

US author’s book on death of Lincoln’s son wins Man Booker prize

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AMERICAN author George Saunders has won this year’s Man Booker Prize, a high-profile literary award, for his first novel, Lincoln in the Bardo – a fictional account of US president Abraham Lincoln burying his young son.

In his acceptance speech this week, Saunders, 58, noted that “we live in a strange time”, adding he saw the key question of the era being whether society responded to events with “exclusion and negative projection and violence”, or “with love”.

Saunders was the second consecutiv­e American writer to win the prize, after the rules were changed in 2014 to allow authors of any book written in English and published in the UK to compete.

His novel, set in 1862, a year into the American Civil war, is a blend of historical accounts and imaginativ­e fiction, which sees Lincoln’s son Willie, who died in the White House at age 11, in “Bardo” – a Tibetan form of purgatory.

The judging panel, led by author and member of Britain’s House of Lords Lola Young, praised the “deeply moving” book, saying it was “utterly original”.

Last year, American Paul Beatty became the first American to win the award, for his novel The Sellout, a biting satire on race relations in the United States. Other previous winners have included this year’s Nobel Prize-winning novelist Kazuo Ishiguro, Salman Rushdie, Iris Murdoch and Margaret Atwood.

The award was previously open only to writers from Britain, Ireland, Zimbabwe or countries in the British Commonweal­th. — Reuters

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