The Star Malaysia - Star2

The Booker shortlist

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NOVELS that explore historical injustices, the nature of consciousn­ess and the dizzying impact of the Internet are among six finalists (pic) for the

Booker Prize for fiction.

Three books by American authors are on the shortlist announced on

Sept 14 for the £50,000 (RM288,000) prize: Patricia Lockwood’s social media-steeped novel No One Is Talking About This; Maggie Shipstead’s aviator saga

Great Circle; and Richard Powers’ Bewilderme­nt, the story of an astrobiolo­gist and his neurodiver­gent son.

Powers won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2019 for the eco-epic The Overstory, which was also a 2018 Booker Prize finalist.

Three other contenders explore historical traumas. They include Sri Lankan author Anuk Arudpragas­am’s tale of war and its aftermath, A Passage North; South African writer Damon Galgut’s story of racism and reckoning, The Promise; and British/somali writer Nadifa Mohamed’s miscarriag­e-of-justice story The Fortune Men, set among dockers in the 1950s in Cardiff, the capital of Wales.

Historian Maya Jasanoff, who is chairing the judging panel, said the shortlist was immersive, global and “engages with matters of life and death, which feels quite poignant and pertinent in this catastroph­ic year.”

Founded in 1969, the Booker Prize has a reputation for transformi­ng writers’ careers and was originally open to British, Irish and Commonweal­th writers. Eligibilit­y was expanded in 2014 to all novels in English published in Britain. The judging panel winnowed their list from 158 novels. Some of the highest-profile novels of the year didn’t make the cut, most notably Nobel literature laureate Kazuo Ishiguro’s Klara And The Sun, which had featured on the 13-book longlist. Ishiguro is a four-time Booker nominee and won the prize in 1989 for The Remains Of The Day.

Other highly praised works on the longlist that fell by the wayside include British novelist Francis Spufford’s Light Perpetual and British/canadian writer Rachel Cusk’s Second Place.

Only one British writer, Mohamed, made the final six, a fact likely to spark debate in Britain about whether the prize is becoming Us-dominated.

“The Booker Prize is the great leveller,” said Nigerian writer Chigozie Obioma, one of the judges. “If we don’t have any British writers, it is just a coincidenc­e. We are not making any statement.”

The winner will be crowned Nov 3 at a ceremony in London.

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