The Zimbabwe Independent

Five debut novels make women’s prize longlist

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FIVE debut novels have been longlisted for the 2022 Women’s prize for fiction, including Build Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith, called “marvellous and confoundin­g” by the Guardian, and Barack Obama’s book list pick e Final Revival of Opal &Nev by Dawnie Walton.

ese novels are up against Booker shortliste­d Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead and e Exhibition­ist by Charlotte Mendelson, who was shortliste­d for the 2008 prize.

Mendelson is joined on the longlist by four more authors who have been previously nominated: ElifShafak, Leone Ross, Catherine Chidgey and Rachel Elliott. Yet the popular authors Sally Rooney and Hanya Yanagihara, who have both been selected in previous years, didn’t make the cut this year.

Chair of judges Mary Ann Sieghart attributed the fact that “a lot of very well-known authors didn’t make it to the longlist and five debut novelists did” to the debuts simply being “brilliant books”.

“Why people are starting to write brilliant books, and managing to do so with their first novel, I can’t really answer … but is it possible that perhaps during the first lockdown people thought, you know what, I have always wanted to write a novel, maybe I will give it a go?”

Many of the novels that were eligible for this year’s prize were written during the coronaviru­s pandemic, a reason why, Sieghart thinks, quite a few of the submission­s were dystopian novels. Other common themes among the novels the judges considered were lesbian relationsh­ips and female friendship, but what struck Sieghart about the books “was a diversity rather than the homogeneit­y of them”.

Any woman writing in English is eligible for the award, and this year the longlist of 16 is made up of five British authors, six Americans, two New Zealanders, one Turkish-British, one American Canadian, and one Trinidadia­n writer.

Sieghart said that after a “harmonious” judging session, she and her fellow judges, Lorraine Candy, Dorothy Koomson, Anita Sethi and Pandora Sykes “discovered we had picked a fantastica­lly diverse list”.

She added: “We didn’t have to make any sort of correction­s to try to get a good variety of subject matter or nationalit­y of author or ethnicity of author or genre, it was just all there. So that was rather wonderful.”

A quarter of the books on the list are published by independen­t presses, with three publishing houses, Unbound, Myriad Editions and Europa Editions, having a book on the longlist for the first time.

e shortlist will be revealed on April 27 and the winner on June 15.

Establishe­d in 1996, after the

Booker prize failed to shortlist any women five years earlier, the Women’s prize is intended “to celebrate and promote fiction by women to the widest range of readers possible”. Former winners include Piranesi by Susanna Clarke and Zadie Smith’s On Beauty. — e Guardian.

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 ?? ?? Some of the book covers of the denut novels shortliste­d for 2022 Women’s prize for fiction.
Some of the book covers of the denut novels shortliste­d for 2022 Women’s prize for fiction.
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