Showing posts with label Shehan Karunatilaka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shehan Karunatilaka. Show all posts

Sunday, November 6, 2022

Booker prize 2022 / Alan Garner becomes oldest author to be shortlisted

 

Booker prize shortlisted authors … top (from left): Percival Everett, Elizabeth Strout, NoViolet Bulawayo; bottom (from left): Claire Keegan, Alan Garner, Shehan Karunatilaka

Booker prize: Alan Garner becomes oldest author to be shortlisted

This article is more than 1 month old

Only British writer on list will collect prize on 88th birthday if successful, and is among a list of books judges say ‘speak powerfully about important things’


Sarah Shaffi
Tue 6 September 2022

Alan Garner has become the oldest author to be shortlisted for the Booker prize, and is the only British writer on this year’s list.

He is joined on the shortlist, described by chair of judges Neil MacGregor as six books that “speak powerfully about important things”, by one Irish writer, two Americans, a Zimbabwean and a writer from Sri Lanka.

Historian MacGregor said the judges were looking for books in which “something momentous happens”, as well as novels that would “demonstrate how great writing gives the human predicament a shape”.

MacGregor was joined on the judging panel by academic and broadcaster Shahidha Bari; historian Helen Castor; novelist and critic M John Harrison; and novelist, poet and professor Alain Mabanckou.

If Garner goes on to win for his novel Treacle Walker, about a young boy who is visited by a wandering healer, he will receive the award on his 88th birthday. Treacle Walker is also the shortest book on the list, coming in at around 15,000 words.

The judges called it a “mysterious, beautifully written and affecting glimpse into the deep work of being human”, and said the book had made some of them cry.

Also making the cut are former shortlistees NoViolet Bulawayo and Elizabeth Strout. Zimbabwean Bulawayo, who was shortlisted in 2013 for her debut We Need New Names, is through to the final six again with the Animal Farm-inspired political satire Glory, narrated by a chorus of animals. The judges called it “a magical crossing of the African continent, in its political excesses and its wacky characters”.

American author Strout was shortlisted in 2006 with My Name is Lucy Barton. The title on this year’s list, Oh William!, is also part of her Lucy Barton series and sees the character reconnect with her first husband. The judges described it as “one of those quietly radiant books that finds the deepest mysteries in the simplest things”.

Shehan Karunatilaka’s The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida is about a photographer caught up in the horrors of civil war, and is his second novel, published 10 years after his first. He is the second Sri Lankan author in two years to make the Booker shortlist, and has written a novel “full of ghosts, gags and a deep humanity”, say the judges.

American writer Percival Everett’s The Trees is about detectives who investigate a series of gruesome murders in Money, Mississippi, where Emmett Till was lynched 65 years earlier. The judges said it was “horrifying and howlingly funny” and that it “asks questions about history and justice and allows not a single easy answer”.

Irish author Claire Keegan is shortlisted for the slim Small Things Like These, set in the run-up to Christmas in a small Irish town. The panel said Keegan was “measured and merciless as she dissects the silent acquiescence of a 1980s Irish town in the Church’s cruel treatment of unmarried mothers”.

There had been, said director of the Booker prize foundation, Gaby Wood, “virtually no arguments, no proper rows” between the judges when deciding on the list. They had chosen books that bring history to life and, said Bari, “books that use humour as a strategy”.

Half of the titles on the list are published by independents: Small Things Like These by Faber, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida by Sort Of, and The Trees by Influx.

Bea Carvalho, head of fiction at Waterstones said the shortlist showed “astonishing literary experience and prestige, with nominees who booksellers have enjoyed championing for many years”.

“We are delighted that the Booker judges have chosen such a commercially strong and wide-reaching selection and can’t wait to see what they choose as 2022’s winner,” she added.

The 2022 winner will be announced on Monday 17 October in an awards ceremony held at the Roundhouse in London. The six shortlisted authors each receive £2,500 and a specially bound edition of their book; the winner will receive £50,000.

THE GUARDIAN



Wednesday, October 26, 2022

‘Writers all want to be rock stars’ / Booker winner Shehan Karunatilaka on ghosts, war and childish dreams


Shehan Karunatilaka, who won the 2022 Booker prize on Monday for his novel
The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida. 
Photograph: Sarah Lee



‘Writers all want to be rock stars’: Booker winner Shehan Karunatilaka on ghosts, war and childish dreams


Set during the Sri Lankan civil war and narrated by a dead man, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida is part murder mystery, part political satire and part love story. Its author recalls the grim events that inspired it – and the editor who kept pushing him to do better

Lisa Allardice
Tue 18 October 2022

When Shehan Karunatilaka woke in his hotel this morning after winning the Booker prize – becoming the first Sri Lankan novelist to do so since Michael Ondaatje won for The English Patient in 1992 – he had more than 300 unread WhatsApp messages, but also tweets from Sri Lanka’s president, the leader of the opposition and other politicians congratulating him. These were met by a furious response from Sri Lankans, who “piled back on them saying: ‘Stay away from this guy. He’s writing about YOU,’” Karunatilaka paraphrases when we talk a little later that morning.

Karunatilaka wins Booker prize for Sri Lankan political satire, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida

 

Shehan Karunatilaka


Shehan Karunatilaka wins Booker prize for Sri Lankan political satire, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida

Sri Lankan novelist Shehan Karunatilaka has won the 2022 Booker Prize for his second novel, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida.

The win couldn’t come at a better time for Sri Lanka, a country once more engaged in political and economic instability, as it suffers through one of the world’s worst economic crises, with soaring inflation, food and fuel shortages, and low supplies of foreign reserves. And of course, the government was overthrown in July, after President Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled following mass protests.

This is the winner of the Booker Prize 2022 - and the other 5 books on the shortlist


This is the winner of the Booker Prize 2022 - and the other 5 books on the shortlist

 

Booker prize / Alan Garner becomes oldest author to be shortlisted


  • The Booker Prize 2022 has been won by Sri Lankan author Shehan Karunatilaka.
  • The shortlist featured six works of fiction by authors across four continents and five different nationalities.
  • From civil war to politics, racism, myth and folklore, here's what you need to know about the winner and the other five novels shortlisted.

Tuesday, September 6, 2022

Booker prize 2022 / The story had been stirring in me for most of my life’: How I wrote a Booker-shortlisted novel

Clockwise from top left: Percival Everett, Elizabeth Strout, NoViolet Bulawayo, Shehan Karunatilaka, Alan Garner and Claire Keegan

Booker prize 2022


‘The story had been stirring in me for most of my life’: How I wrote a Booker-shortlisted novel


Saturday 8 October 2022


NoViolet Bulawayo on Glory

The front cover of Glory by NoViolet Bulawayo

On 14 November 2017, things fell apart for Robert G Mugabe, the long-serving president of Zimbabwe. The strongman, who’d once upon a glorious time gloated “Only God, who appointed me will remove me,” was deposed through a sanitised military coup and replaced by his former deputy.