The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Brit Mantel a favorite to win Booker prize

- By Jill Lawless Associated Press

LONDON — British writer Hilary Mantel was named one of six finalists for the prestigiou­s Booker literary prize on Tuesday for “Bring up the Bodies,” a tale of politics and passion at the court of King Henry VIII.

The novel is a sequel to “Wolf Hall,” which won the 50,000 pound ($82,000) prize in 2009. The books follow the king’s right-hand man, Thomas Cromwell, as he tries to keep his influence — and his head — in treacherou­s Tudor power circles.

Bookmakers immediatel­y made Mantel one of the favorites to win the prize. Betting firm William Hill ranked her at 2/ 1, behind “Umbrella,” a century-spanning stream of consciousn­ess by Britain’s Will Self.

The prize, which brings a big boost in publicity and sales for the winner, is open to writers from Britain, Ireland and the Commonweal­th of former British colonies.

The finalists, selected from a 12-book long list, include novels set in post- World War II Asia — “The Garden of Evening Mists,” by Malaysia’s Tan Twan Eng — and Mumbai opium dens, in “Narcopolis” by India’s Jeet Thayil.

Three books by British writers round out the list. They are Self ’s “Umbrella”; “Swimming Home,” a portrait of the devastatio­n wreaked by depression by South Africa-born Deborah Levy; and Alison Moore’s “The Lighthouse,” about a British man’s life-changing holiday in Germany.

Founded in 1969, the Booker always brings a blaze of literary debate. Last year’s jury, which gave the prize to Julian Barnes for “The Sense of an Ending,” was accused of dumbing down after the chair of the panel said finalists had been chosen for “readabilit­y.”

This year’s list appears more adventurou­s. Only Mantel has been a finalist before.

Peter Stothard, editor of the Times Literary Supplement and head of the judging panel, said “the pure power of prose” had been the deciding factor in choosing the finalists.

The winner will be announced Oct. 16.

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