The Scotsman

Hip-hop artist up for oldest literary prize in Britain

● Edinburgh award panel reveals shortlist for James Tait Black prizes

- By GEORGE MAIR newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The debut book by award-winning hip-hop artist Akala – the half Scots younger brother of rapper Ms. Dynamite – has been shortliste­d for Britain’s oldest literary prize in its centenary year.

Natives: Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire, by Akala, the stage name of 35-year old Kingslee James Mclean Daley, is among the contenders for the James Tait Black prize for biography, which dates back to 1919.

The £10,000 prize is one of two awarded annually by the University of Edinburgh for books published during the previous year, one for the best biography and the other for a work of fiction.

The winners of both prizes will be announced at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Book Festival in August.

Natives, in which the Mobo award-winning artist and political activist takes his own experience­s and widens them to confront issues around race and class in Britain, is one of four books on the shortlist for the biography prize.

It is joined by The Life of War Correspond­ent Marie Colvin by Lindsey Hilsum; and The Life of Stuff: A Memoir about the Mess We Leave Behind, by Susannah Walker.

The fourth biography in the running is The Catalogue of Shipwrecke­d Books: Young Columbus and the Quest for a Universal Library, by Edward

0 Akala – or Kingslee James Mclean Daley – is one of the nominees for the James Tait Black prizes

Wilson-lee, about Christophe­r Columbus’s illegitima­te son, Hernando, who sailed the world collecting books and prints.

Hundreds of books were read by academics and postgradua­te students from the University’s School of Literature­s, Languages and Cultures,

who nominated titles for the shortlist.

Biography judge Dr Simon Cooke, of the University of Edinburgh, said: “In searching, eloquent, and formally inventive exploratio­ns of their subjects, these four books ask questions about the way all of us live our lives. I’m delighted

that this year’s shortlist shows the reach and vitality of biographic­al writing in the centenary year of the James Tait Black.”

Contenders for the £10,000 fiction prize include a book inspired by computing science pioneer Alan Turing and a debut novel about a woman’s journey into motherhood. The other nominated titles in the novels section are a book about personal relationsh­ips in the midst of political turmoil and a collection of short stories exploring black identity in America.

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