India, China sweep book prize shortlist
Authors from India, China and Japan swept the shortlist for Asia’s top literary prize on Tuesday, with a debut novelist and Nobel Prize winner among those vying for the $30,000 award.
Manu Joseph grabbed one of five shortlisted spots for The Man Asian Literary Prize with his debut Serious Men, while Japanese author Kenzaburo Oe, winner of the 1994 Nobel Prize for Literature, was also among the finalists for The Changeling.
The story tells of one man’s search to find out why his brother-in-law killed himself.
In a videoconference from Britain on Tuesday Brick Lane author Monica Ali, one of the award’s judges, called Joseph’s story set in the slums of Mumbai “seriously funny” and “ingenious”, while praising Oe for his “rich and complex work”.
Acclaimed Chinese author Bi Feiyu’s Three Sisters, a portrait of contemporary Chinese culture, The Thing About Thugs by Tabish Khair and Japanese writer Yoko Ogawa’s Hotel Iris rounded out the five finalists. Ogawa’s novel is set in a crumbling seaside hotel and follows a quiet, 17-year-old girl who finds herself drawn to a middle-aged man who has been kicked out of a room with a prostitute.
The winner will be announced at a dinner in Hong Kong in March.
Ali said she and her fellow judges, Harvard academic Homi K. Bhabha and award-winning writer Hsu-Ming Teo, agreed on a shortlist that highlights Asia’s “thriving” literary scene.
“(The books) were judged purely on literary excellence,” Ali added.
“That was the only criteria we used.” All the shortlisted titles touched on the human experience “in language that was beautifully honed”, Ali said.
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