The Denver Post

Women dominate shortlist for award

- By Alex Marshall © The New York Times Co.

LONDON » Olga Tokarczuk, the Nobel Prize- winning Polish novelist, is among five female writers shortliste­d for this year’s Internatio­nal Booker Prize, arguably the world’s most important award for fiction translated into English.

Tokarczuk is nominated for “The Books of Jacob,” along with translator Jennifer Croft, just four years after the pair won the same prize for “Flights.”

Other high- profile nominees on the sixstrong shortlist, which was unveiled at the London Book Fair on Thursday, include Mieko Kawakami, the star Japanese author best known for “Breasts and Eggs,” and Claudia Piñeiro, the Argentine crime writer.

Tokarczuk’s “The Books of Jacob” tells the story of Jacob Frank, a self- proclaimed messiah who wanders around 18th- century Europe, acolytes in tow. When the Swedish Academy awarded Tokarczuk the Nobel Prize in literature in 2019, they called “The Books of Jacob” her “magnum opus.”

Originally published in Poland in 2014, the almost 1,000- page- long novel has received rave reviews in the United States since the English translatio­n was published this year.

Kawakami is nominated for “Heaven,” a novel about a relentless­ly bullied 14- year- old, translated from Japanese by Samuel Bett and David Boyd.

Piñeiro’s shortliste­d book is “Elena Knows,” about a grief- stricken mother who turns detective to investigat­e her daughter’s apparent suicide.

The Internatio­nal Booker Prize is separate from the Booker Prize, which is for novels originally published in English, but comes with the same prize money:

50,000 pounds, or about $ 65,000.

The other shortliste­d titles are:

• “A New Name: Septology VI- VII,” by Jon Fosse, a Norwegian writer and playwright who is a star in his own country. Translated by Damion Searls, the novel is the last in a series and follows a highly religious artist in the moments before his death.

• “Cursed Bunny,” a short story collection by Korean writer Bora Chung. Translated by Anton Hur, it combines elements of horror and science fiction to critique capitalism. Frank Wynne, the chair of the judging panel for this year’s prize, said in an online news conference that the collection was “somewhere between David Lynch and the early body horror of David Cronenberg.”

• Geetanjali Shree’s “Tomb of Sand,” translated from Hindi by Daisy Rockwell, which follows an 80- year- old Indian woman’s journey to Pakistan after her husband’s death. Wynne said the novel’s premise may sound depressing, but the book “was anything but.” It was filled with humor that must have made it very difficult to translate, he added.

The winner of this year’s prize will be announced May 26.

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