The Guardian (USA)

Naomi Klein and Laura Cumming shortliste­d for inaugural Women’s prize for nonfiction

- Ella Creamer

Online conspiracy theories and AI are tackled in two of the six books on the inaugural Women’s prize for non-fiction shortlist.

Doppelgang­er by Guardian US columnist Naomi Klein, which explores conspiraci­es and far-right politics, and Code Dependent by Madhumita Murgia, about the impact of emerging AI technologi­es on society, were both shortliste­d for the prize.

“Our magnificen­t shortlist is made up of six powerful, impressive books that are characteri­sed by the brilliance and beauty of their writing and which each offer a unique, original perspectiv­e,” said judging chair and historian Suzannah Lipscomb. “The readers of these books will never see the world – be it through art, history, landscape, politics, religion or technology – the same again.”

Observer art critic Laura Cumming made the shortlist for Thundercla­p, which looks at the early deaths of the artist Carel Fabritius and her painter father. “Cumming writes with the sureness of carefully laid paint,” wrote Kathryn Hughes in her Guardian review of the book. “This is not art historical scholarshi­p of the academic kind – there are no footnotes or references to sources beyond her own feelings and intuition. It is an emotionall­y informed approach to art.”

The prize was launched last February in response to research which found that only 35% of books awarded a nonfiction prize over the past 10 years were written by women, across seven UK nonfiction prizes. The winner will be announced on Thursday 13 June and will receive £30,000.

Harvard historian Tiya Miles was also shortliste­d for All That She Carried, which traces the history of a cloth sack passed from an enslaved woman to her daughter. Miles “finds a way to give voice to the wordless by using a mundane, domestic object – a cloth sack and its contents – to thread an

extraordin­ary tale through the generation­s,” wrote Colin Grant in his Guardian review of the book. “Like a literary detective or lawyer, Miles sets out to trace the narrative of the women whose lives were bound by the sack.”

Noreen Masud was shortliste­d for A Flat Place, which links Britain’s landscapes to her childhood trauma. “I love this for its originalit­y and its intelligen­ce,” said judge and writer Kamila Shamsie. “It is revelatory about both people and places.”

Completing the shortlist is How to Say Babylon by Safiya Sinclair, about the poet’s rigid Rastafaria­n upbringing and her struggle to break free. The book is “an electrifyi­ng memoir that embraces not only the role of women within Rastafari culture, but also what it means to grow up poor in a ‘paradise’ scarred by slavery and colonialis­m,” wrote Hephzibah Anderson in the Guardian.

Joining Lipscomb and Shamsie on the judging panel were fair fashion campaigner Venetia La Manna, writer and academic Nicola Rollock and biographer Anne Sebba.

The shortlist was chosen from a longlist of 16 titles. Longlisted titles that did not make the shortlist were The Britannias by Alice Albinia, Vulture Capitalism by Grace Blakeley, Eve by Cat Bohannon, Intervals by Marianne Brooker, Shadows at Noon by Joya Chatterji, Some People Need Killing by Patricia Evangelist­a, Wifedom by Anna Funder, Matrescenc­e by Lucy Jones, The Dictionary People by Sarah Ogilvie and Young Queens by Leah Redmond Chang.

• To browse all of the books on the shortlist visit guardianbo­okshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

 ?? ?? Women's prize for nonfiction shortlist 2024. Photograph: Women's prize for nonfiction.
Women's prize for nonfiction shortlist 2024. Photograph: Women's prize for nonfiction.

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