Skip to main content

Booker Prize 2022: Shortlist includes oldest author yet




          
The nominees on the Booker Prize list 2022 are up for a £50,000 prize   -  
           Copyright  Booker Prize

The shortlist for the Booker Prize has been announced with the oldest author ever making the cut.

If successful, Alan Garner, the only British writer on the list, will collect the prize on his 88th birthday. 

The shortlist features his book ‘Treacle Walker’, the story of a young oddball, Joe Coppock, who befriends a wandering healer. The nod comes 55-years after Garner’s first literary award, the Carnegie Medal, for ‘The Owl Service’


The other five nominees are: ‘The Trees’ by American writer Percival Everett; ‘Small Things Like These’ by Irish writer Claire Keegan; ‘Glory’ by Zimbabwean author NoViolet Bulawago; ‘Oh William!’ by American author Elizabeth Strout; and ‘The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida’ by Sri Lankan author Shehan Karunatilaka.

“These six books, we believe, speak powerfully about important things,” says chair of judges for the Booker Prize 2022, Neil MacGregor.

"Why did we choose these six? In every one, the author uses language not only to tell us what happens, but to create a world which we, outsiders, can enter and inhabit.”

What is the Booker prize?

Running for over five decades the Booker Prize is one of the leading fiction prizes in the English language.

The prize is awarded by a panel of judges for the best sustained work of fiction written in English published in the UK and Ireland. The winner receives £50,000 and £2,500 goes to everyone on the shortlist.

Among the shortlist of six for 2022, five are based on real events and people, with four offering readers an insight into world events.

Karunatilaka’s ‘The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida’ depicts the darkness of the Sri Lankan civil war and ‘Glory’ by Bulawago shows readers the downfall of Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe.

Ireland’s Magdalene laundries receive a visit in ‘Small Things Like These’ and the horrendous lynching of Emmett Till in Mississippi is explored in ‘The Trees’.

Meanwhile, Garner’s Coppock character is loosely based on a real person and contains autobiographical elements. 'Treacle Walker' is also the shortest book on the list, containing around 15,000 words.

‘The shortlist that eventually emerged shows great geographical breadth as well as linguistic and conceptual agility,” says Gaby Wood, director of the Booker Prize Foundation.

“Together, these six novels look at history and at the lives of individuals with wit, courage and rage, allowing us to see the world through many sets of supremely perceptive eyes.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Big freeze drove early humans out of Europe

 From BBC News,   By Pallab Ghosh-   Science correspondent, Edited by - Amal Udawatta, IMAGE SOURCE, PHILIPPE PSAILA/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Image caption, Remains of a primitive human species known as Homo erectus have been found in Europe dating back to 1.4 million years ago. A big freeze previously unknown to science drove early humans from Europe for 200,000 years, but they adapted and returned, new research shows. Ocean sediments from 1.1 million years ago show temperatures suddenly dropped more than 5C, scientists say. They say our early ancestors couldn't have survived as they didn't have heating or warm clothes. Until now, the consensus had been that humans had existed in Europe continuously for 1.5 million years. Ancient humans' stone tools found in Kenya Ancient human remains found in County Armagh Ancient humans survived longer than we thought Evidence for the big freeze is found in sediments in the seabed off the coast of Lisbon, Portugal. Layers are deposited eac

Email (required) * Constant Contact Use. Comet Nishimura swings by for binoculars and telescopes

 From - Sky & Tellescope, By - Alan Macrobert, Edited by - Amal Udawatta Comet Nishimura on the morning of September 5th, on its way in. The comet is the green bit at left. The star cluster at upper right is the Beehive. The brilliant light at lower right is Venus. Right-click image to open higher-res version in new tab. Michael Jäger took this view "from my observatory in Martinsberg, Lower Austria." It's a stack of eight 30-second exposures he made using a DSLR camera with a 50-mm lens at f/2.5. Comet Nishimura swings by for binoculars and telescopes.  Comet Nishimura (2023 P1), discovered just last month, is brightening toward its September 17th perihelion. The comet starts this week very low in the dawn sky. You'll need a low view to the east-northeast on the mornings of September 9th, 10th, and maybe 11th. The farther north you live the better. The waning crescent Moon won't pose interference. By the 13th or 14th the comet shifts to the low  evening  sky,

INDIA’S CHANDRAYAAN 3 LANDS ON THE MOON; RUSSIA'S LUNA 25 CRASHES

   From - Sky & Telescope   By - David Dikinson,   Edited  by - Amal Udawatta,          The first surface image received from Chandrayaan 3.             ISRO In a first for the nation, India’s Chandrayaan 3 soft-landed in the lunar south pole region of the Moon. Russia’s Luna 25 lander crashed, however. Today was a “historic day for India’s space sector,” says India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, on   X , formerly known as Twitter. "Congratulations to ISRO for the remarkable success of Chandrayaan 3 lunar mission.” The landing occurred near Manzinus U Crater on the lunar nearside at 12:34 Universal Time (UT) (8:34 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time, or EDT) on Wednesday, August 23rd. This makes India the fourth nation to soft-land on the Moon, after the United States, the former Soviet Union, and China. ESA’s European Space Tracking system (ESTRACK) and NASA’s Deep Space Network (DSN) partnered with ISRO to provide global tracking coverage for Chandrayaan 3. A cheering mission contr