The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

City forced to cancel its book prize this year

Sad chapter for Dundee Internatio­nal Book Prize as organisers fail to agree print deal

- Paul malik pamalik@thecourier.co.uk

This year’s Dundee Internatio­nal Book Prize has been cancelled.

Organisers have been forced to pull the plug, saying they could not guarantee the winning entrant’s book would be published.

In a joint statement, Dundee University and Dundee City Council – who together fund the prize – said after conversati­ons with “various partners”, an agreement could not be guaranteed.

Glasgow-based publisher Freight Books was announced in January as one of the event partners, but a spokesman for the company said it had “absolutely” no working agreement to publish this year’s winning book “whatsoever”.

The spokesman said: “We were obliged to print last year’s winning book, which we did.

“We have had no involvemen­t at all with this year’s competitio­n.

“The cancellati­on of the book prize is nothing to do with us. I am not a publisher and there was no appetite to continue doing that.”

Reports had suggested an upcoming court case between Freight Books and at least 40 authors had caused a breakdown between the publisher and the Dundee Internatio­nal Book Prize. Freight Books deny this.

A statement on the Dundee Internatio­nal Book Prize website, signed by Dundee City Council and Dundee University, said: “Without being in a position to guarantee publicatio­n of the winning title – which we feel to be a very key component of the prize – with much regret, we feel that the prize is unable to proceed this year.

“The delay has been occasioned by necessary conversati­ons with the various partners involved about how best to proceed.

“We have been working very hard to find a satisfacto­ry solution to this, and one that would support the winning author and title, hence an ever-growing delay in the competitio­n timeline and communicat­ions from us, for which we can only apologise, but ultimately it has not been possible.”

Jessica Thummel’s The Margins was announced as the winner of last year’s competitio­n, which was published by Freight Books. Ms Thummel also won £5,000 and a week’s protected writing time in Dundee.

Entries for the Dundee Internatio­nal Book Prize 2017 opened in January but a shortlist was never finalised.

The competitio­n has been a staple of the Dundee literary calendar for more than a decade.

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? Last year’s winner Jessica Thummel.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. Last year’s winner Jessica Thummel.

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