The Guardian (USA)

Kathryn Scanlan wins Gordon Burn prize for novel Kick the Latch

- Ella Creamer

American author Kathryn Scanlan has won this year’s Gordon Burn prize for her “desperatel­y consumable” novel about horse training.

Kick the Latch is based on a series of interviews with Sonia, a horse trainer from the midwest. The novel is “a thundering achievemen­t, liberated from hard lines of genre and form by a laser-focus on not just excavation, but building of voice,” said judging chair and journalist Terri White.

Scanlan said it is “a thrill and an honour to receive this prize, which is unique in its recognitio­n of work that plays with form, style and genre”.

She was announced as the winner at a ceremony in Newcastle, Burn’s home city, on Thursday. She wins £10,000 and the opportunit­y to go on a writing retreat at Burn’s cottage in Berwickshi­re.

“In a series of vignettes drawn from transcribe­d conversati­ons between Scanlan and Sonia, the reader encounters dilapidate­d trailers, racetracks, backs of vans, long hours, brutality, beauty and joy,” wrote Wendy Erskine in her Guardian review of the novel. “Sonia’s voice is unsentimen­tal and humane, alert to absurdity and human frailty.”

The prize recognises fiction and nonfiction books that “push boundaries, cross genres and challenge readers’ expectatio­ns” and that show an “affinity with the spirit and sensibilit­y” of Burn’s “literary methods”. Burn, who died in 2009, wrote 10 books including the novels Alma Cogan and Fullalove.

“Kick the Latch is a rare beast, setting out with a premise that feels neatly bordered but revealing itself almost immediatel­y to be a desperatel­y consumable piece of literature, pushing boundaries in terms of form and structure but never becoming inaccessib­le,” said judge and journalist Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff.

Los Angeles-based Scanlan’s first novel, Aug 9 – Fog, was a reworking of an elderly woman’s diary found at an estate auction. Her short story collection, The Dominant Animal, was published in 2020.

Judge and author Sheena Patel said that Kick the Latch is a “remarkable novel” of “tender, sparse and muscular” prose. “A worthy winner for this prize, you all need to read it.”

Kick the Latch was chosen over six other shortliste­d titles: Killing Thatcher by Rory Carroll, If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery, Wifedom by Anna Funder, O Brother by John Niven, Ordinary Human Failings by Megan Nolan and Split Tooth by Tanya Tagaq.

“The choice of subject, the method, the execution – it was all perfect in a book that deserves to be on record as an award-winner,” said judge and journalist Andrew Hankinson.

Previous winners of the prize include Benjamin Myers, Peter Pomerantse­v and Hanif Abdurraqib. Last year, Preti Taneja won for her examinatio­n of the 2019 London Bridge terror attack, Aftermath.

 ?? Photograph: Melanie Schiff ?? Pushing boundaries … Gordon Burn prize winner Kathryn Scanlan.
Photograph: Melanie Schiff Pushing boundaries … Gordon Burn prize winner Kathryn Scanlan.
 ?? ?? Kick the Latch by Kathryn Scanlan
Kick the Latch by Kathryn Scanlan

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