Booker Prize (British Literary Award)
Booker Prize (British Literary Award)
⇒ Alternative Titles: Booker McConnell Prize, Booker Prize for Fiction, Man Booker Prize
⇒ Booker Prize, in full Man Booker Prize, formerly Booker McConnell Prize, prestigious British award given annually to a full-length novel in English.
⇒ Booker McConnell, a multinational company, established the award in 1968 to provide a counterpart to the Prix Goncourt in France. Initially, only English-language writers from the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and the Commonwealth countries were eligible. In 2013, however, it was announced that the prize would be open to English-language writers worldwide from 2014.
⇒ The prize was the subject of controversy on several occasions, and in 1984 Salman Rushdie, the winner of the prize in 1981 for his novel Midnight’s Children, described the judging committee as “Killjoyces” and “Anti-Prousts” after the committee chairman stated that he had not read the fiction of James Joyce and Marcel Proustand did not want to award the prize to writers like them.
⇒ Rushdie won the Booker of Bookers [1993] and the Best of the Booker [2008] prizes when they were given in celebration of the prize’s 25th and 40th anniversaries, respectively.
⇒ The award was administered by the Book Trust until 2002, when oversight passed to the Man Group PLC, an investment management firm.
⇒ Well-known recipients of the prize include V.S. Naipaul, Nadine Gordimer, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Iris Murdoch, J.M. Coetzee, A.S. Byatt, Kingsley Amis, Penelope Lively, Ben Okri, Michael Ondaatje, Ian McEwan, Peter Carey, Kiran Desai and Hilary Mantel.
⇒ In 1992 the Booker Russian Novel Prize was set up to reward contemporary Russian authors, to stimulate wider knowledge of modern Russian fiction, and to encourage translation and publication of Russian fiction outside Russia. The Russian prize was disassociated from the other Bookers in 1999, after which sponsorship was provided by several Russian companies.
⇒ The biennial Man Booker International Prize was established in 2005 as a lifetime achievement award. From 2016 it was awarded annually to the writer of a novel or short-story collection in English translation.
⇒ The annual Man Asian Prize was established in 2007; the Man Group announced in 2012 that it was withdrawing its sponsorship of the prize.
⇒ In 1969 and 1970 the prize was awarded to a novel published in the year previous to that in which the prize was given. In 1971 the prize was awarded to a novel published that same year, between January and November. Because the rule change precluded eligibility for novels published in 1970, the one-off Lost Man Booker Prize was devised in 2010 to honour such a novel. The winner, decided by public vote, was Troubles J.G. Farrell.
⇒ Geetanjali Shree has become the first indian win International Booker Prize for an Indian Language Book Ret Samadhi (Tomb of Sand).
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