Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
International

Neel Mukherjee shortlisted for 2014 Man Booker prize

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Sep, 2014 08:43 AM
    British-Indian writer Neel Mukherjee's family saga "The Lives of Others" has been shortlisted for 2014 Man Booker prize, it was announced Tuesday.
     
    "I am absolutely delighted to be shortlisted for this award. It is a great and singular honour to be amongst the other authors on the list," said Kolkata-born Mukherjee in a statement.
     
    Responding to this news, Penguin Random House's editor-in-chief, literary publishing, Meru Gokhale tweeted: "This novel tells the story of three generations - prosperity, idealism, poverty, extremism, shocking family squabbles."
     
    This was also the first time in the British prestigious literary award's 46-year history that it was opened to writers of any nationality, writing in English and having their work published in Britain. It had hitherto been confined to writers from Commonwealth countries, Ireland, and Zimbabwe.
     
    Hence, two US authors Joshua Ferris, Karen Joy Fowler and Australia's Richard Flanagan have made it to the shortlist, along with British authors Howard Jacobson, Ali Smith and Mukherjee. They make up the top six contenders for the award.
     
    Ferris was nominated for his novel "To Rise Again at a Decent Hour" and Fowler is shortlisted for her American family portrait "We Are Completely Beside Ourselves".
     
    According to independent.co.uk, Ali Smith has been shortlisted for the third time with her experimental novel "How to be Both", Jacobson is nominated for his book "J", and Flanagan is nominated for his novel "The Narrow Road to the Deep North" which centres on a British surgeon working in a Japanese prisoner of war camp on the Burma Death Railway.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Hindu temple may be razed in Pakistan

    Hindu temple may be razed in Pakistan
    A 79-year old Hindu temple in Rawalpindi may be razed to make way for an educational and housing complex, a media report said Thursday....

    Hindu temple may be razed in Pakistan

    UN health agency says Ebola cases underreported, could hit 20,000; US to test Ebola vaccine

    UN health agency says Ebola cases underreported, could hit 20,000; US to test Ebola vaccine
    GENEVA - The Ebola outbreak in West Africa eventually could exceed 20,000 cases, more than six times as many as are known now, the World Health Organization...

    UN health agency says Ebola cases underreported, could hit 20,000; US to test Ebola vaccine

    US fighter jet crashes in Virginia

    US fighter jet crashes in Virginia
    A US F-15C Eagle fighter jet crashed Wednesday morning near Deerfield in Virginia during a routine mission, Pentagon confirmed....

    US fighter jet crashes in Virginia

    Ebola epidemic to get worse: health official

    Ebola epidemic to get worse: health official
    The Ebola outbreak in West Africa will get worse before it gets better, said a top public health official, the BBC reported Thursday....

    Ebola epidemic to get worse: health official

    Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity

    Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity
    LAS VEGAS, Nev. - The death of an Arizona firearms instructor by a 9-year-old girl who was firing a fully automatic Uzi displayed a tragic side of what has become a hot industry in the U.S.: gun tourism.

    Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity

    UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse

    UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse
    Rotherham is a working-class town that is remarkable in its ordinariness — a collection of charmless discount stores, betting shops and kebab counters, surrounded by sleepy residential streets lined with brick houses that have seen better days.

    UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse