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THE following six novels have been shortlisted for the
2006 Booker Prize for Fiction, quite an eclectic mix I would say, not so staid and stodgy as in the years past. There are more female writers than male writers this time round; the last time this happened was in 2003.
Canongate, the independent Scottish publishing house, has two writers on the shortlist:
Kate Grenville and
M.J. Hyland. And both of them are Australians, too.
Penguin must be over the moon with two writers on the shortlist, too:
Kiran Desai and
Hisham Matar. Most of the writers are new to the shortlist; the only writer who has appeared on the shortlist before is the ever-excellent
Sarah Waters for
Fingersmith in 2002.
Edward St. Aubyn and
Kiran Desai, the daughter of
Anita Desai, are very good. The only first-time novelist is
Hisham Matar, a new voice in literary fiction, with a semi-autobiographical novel set in Libya. So, who will it be this time round? I will be rooting for
Kiran Desai.
The Shortlist1.
The Inheritance of Loss (Penguin/Hamish Hamilton) /
Kiran Desai2.
The Secret River (Canongate) /
Kate Grenville3.
Carry Me Down (Canongate) /
M.J. Hyland4.
In the Country of Men (Penguin/Viking) /
Hisham Matar5.
Mother’s Milk (Picador) /
Edward St. Aubyn6.
The Night Watch (Virago) /
Sarah Waters
The winner will be announced on October 10, 2006.
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