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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Booker Prize joint winners

Judges tore up the rule book on Monday, awarding the prestigious Booker Prize for Fiction jointly to Canadian author Margaret Atwood for “The Testaments” and Anglo-Nigerian author Bernardine Evaristo for “Girl, Woman, Other.”

Booker Prize joint winners

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Atwood becomes only the second female author to win the award twice, sharing the £50,000 ($62,800, 60,000 euros) prize at the 50th anniversary ceremony at London’s Guildhall.

The award has been shared twice before, in 1974 and 1997, when the rules were changed to supposedly prevent it from happening again.

The 79-year-old Atwood, who wore a badge of climate activist group Extinction Rebellion, held aloft the arm of her fellow winner as they walked to the podium together.

“I’m very surprised, I would have thought I would have been too elderly,” said Atwood, who was honored for her best-selling sequel to her 1985 dystopian classic “The Handmaid’s Tale”.

“I don’t need the attention, so I’m very glad that you’re getting some,” she said to Evaristo, joking that as “a good Canadian, we don’t do famous, we think it is in bad taste, so it would have been embarrassing if I’d been alone here”.

Evaristo responded that it was “so incredible to share this with Margaret Atwood, who is such a legend.

“I am the first black woman to win this prize,” she added, to cheers from the audience.

She later told reporters she was “happy to share it, I’m a sharing person,” adding the prize money would go on paying off her mortgage.

‘Resilience and resistance’

The title of best work of English-language fiction published in the United Kingdom and Ireland has launched careers and courted controversy since its creation in 1969.

Past laureates have ranged from celebrated writers such as Ian McEwan and Julian Barnes to Kazuo Ishiguro and Roddy Doyle.

Paul Beatty became the first American winner when the Booker bowed to pressure and began including authors from outside the British Commonwealth, Ireland and Zimbabwe in 2013.

This year’s shortlist featured six novelists—four of them women—born across four continents.

The five-judge panel included the writer-broadcaster Afua Hirsch and the British-Chinese novelist and filmmaker Xiaolu Guo.

Of Atwood’s novel, chairman of judges Peter Florence said the panel “loves this examination of complicity and resilience and resistance, we love the language and the story-telling power, we love the ambition.” 

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