Daily Mail

The English Patient voted best Booker Prize winner in 50 years

- By Faye White Showbusine­ss Reporter

THE English Patient has been crowned the best ever Man Booker Prize winner.

The novel by Michael Ondaatje was chosen by the public as the recipient for the Golden Man Booker Prize, a one-off accolade to mark its 50th anniversar­y.

All 51 previous winners of the prize were 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, before the books faced a month-long public vote. The judges were journalist Robert McCrum, who chose In a Free State by VS Naipaul for the 1970s; poet Lemn Sissay,who chose Moon Tiger by Penelope Lively for the 1980s; novelist Kamila Shamsie, who chose The English Patient for the 1990s; broadcaste­r Simon Mayo, who chose Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel for the 2000s; and poet Hollie McNish, who chose Lincoln In The Bardo by George Saunders for the 2010s.

Speaking about why she had chosen The English Patient, Miss 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.

The novel – written by Sri-Lankan born Ondaatje in 1992 – tells of the entangleme­nt of four people in an Italian villa, including an English burns victim, as the Second World War ends.

It was adapted into a multiple Oscarwinni­ng film in 1996 starring Kristin Scott Thomas, pictured.

Baroness Helena Kennedy, chairman of the Booker Prize Foundation, added: ‘The English Patient is a compelling work of fiction – both poetic and philosophi­cal – and is a worthy winner.’ The winner was announced at a ceremony at the Southbank Centre in London last night.

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