American wins Booker
Paul Beatty’s The Sellout, a stinging satire of race and class in the United States, won the Man Booker Prize yesterday - the first time an American has taken the prestigious fiction award.
Judges said Beatty’s provocative book was a satire to rank with the classics, and as timely as the evening news.
Historian Amanda Foreman, who chaired the judging panel, said the book ‘‘plunges into the heart of contemporary American society, and with absolutely savage wit - the kind I haven’t seen since (Jonathan) Swift or (Mark) Twain.’’
The Sellout is set in a rundown Los Angeles suburb called Dickens, where the residents include the last survivor of the Little Rascals and the book’s narrator, Bonbon, an AfricanAmerican man on trial at the US Supreme Court for attempting to reinstate slavery and racial segregation. The book has been likened to the comedy of Richard Pryor and Chris Rock, and Beatty goes where many authors fear to tread. Racial stereotypes, offensive speech and police violence are all subject to his scathing eye.
Beatty was awarded the US$61,000 (NZ$85,000) prize by Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, during a black-tie ceremony at London’s medieval Guildhall.
Beatty acknowledged that The Sellout was a hard book - both to read and to write. ‘‘I don’t want to get all dramatic, like writing saved my life,’’ said 54-year-old Beatty, who has written three other novels. ‘‘But writing’s given me a life. I’m just trying to create space for myself - hopefully that creates space for others.’’ - AP