Showing posts with label award winner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label award winner. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Colm Toibin interview in SMH by --

The Interview: Colm Toibin

MALCOLM KNOX
May 15, 2010

http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/books/the-interview-colm-toibin-20100514-v3m4.html

A few words from this interview - concerning Eilis the heroine of Brooklyn his latest much acclaimed book-- which is in our library - the whole interview is available at this link and Colm Toibin is a guest at the Sydney Writers Festival this week. http://www.swf.org.au/

''Eilis is someone who by her nature is a second daughter,'' Toibin says. ''She's not brave, and has always had everything important done for her. Everything about her is withheld. She is holding her breath, as if she's afraid that by breathing out she'll offend somebody.''

He calls her a character in a ''minor key'', not a traditional heroine but ''similar to Catherine Sloper in Washington Square and Fanny Price in Mansfield Park, the ones who are well-mannered, shy, hard-working, careful of what they say''.

One of his readers reacted to Eilis's passivity by saying, ''I would like to wring her neck.''

''I can see that reaction,'' Toibin says, ''because Eilis is different from the big Irish girl with five boyfriends. She's so isolated and solitary. But that was the person who ended up emigrating and becoming everybody's mother.''

From the Sydney Writers Festival Program - see the program for more detail-

http://www.swf.org.au/component/option,com_events/Itemid,124/agid,1880/task,view_detail/

click on image to enlarge


Participants
Colm Tóibín, Caroline Baum (facilitator)

When
Friday, May 21 2010
20:00 - 21:00

Where
City Recital Hall
Angel Place
Sydney

Friday, May 14, 2010

Friday, April 16, 2010

'Siddon Rock' wins CWP best first book; 'Solo' wins best book

Siddon Rock by Australian author Glenda Guest (Vintage) is the winner of the ₤5000 (A$8,250) best first book award in this year's Commonwealth Writers Prize.

Solo by Rana Dasgupta (Fourth Estate) was the winner of the overall Commonwealth Writers Prize for best book. The awards were announced in New Delhi.

Guest, whose debut novel has also been longlisted for the Miles Franklin award in Australia, said the award was ‘verification that this is any good, that I can actually write'.

Now in her 60s, Guest said: ‘Although I started to write late in my life I always knew that I would become a novelist. I am stunned to be receiving this attention which is a huge boost to my confidence and will help me to press on with writing my next novel. This shows that it's never too late to start a new endeavour'.

http://www.booksellerandpublisher.com.au/articles/2010/04/15531/

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Commonwealth Writers' prize 2010 Rana Dasgupta has won

This book is in our library


British author's novel Solo takes award,

with Best First Novel prize
going to Australian Glenda Guest
Rana Dasgupta

Star performer ... Rana Dasgupta

On the day when a band of former winners including AS Byatt, Louis de Bernières and Andrea Levy called for governments around the world to "find new ways to support literacy", and hoped that this award would help, the British writer Rana Dasgupta has won the 2010 Commonwealth Writers' prize with his novel of two halves, Solo. The Australian writer Glenda Guest has won the Best First Novel award with Siddon Rock.

see full article.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/apr/12/rana-dasgupta-commonwealth-writers-prize?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+theguardian%2Fbooks%2Frss+%28Books%29


Tuesday, April 13, 2010

2010 Pulitzer Prize Winners for fiction: Tinkers - on order in our library

http://www.pulitzer.org/citation/2010-Fiction

The 2010 Pulitzer Prize Winners

Fiction

Current tab: citation


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For distinguished fiction by an American author, preferably dealing with American life, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000).

Awarded to "Tinkers," by Paul Harding (Bellevue Literary Press), a powerful celebration of life in which a New England father and son, through suffering and joy, transcend their imprisoning lives and offer new ways of perceiving the world and mortality.

Finalists

Also nominated as finalists in this category were "Love in Infant Monkeys," by Lydia Millet (Soft Skull Press), an imaginative collection of linked stories, often describing a memorable encounter between a famous person and an animal, underscoring the human folly of longing for significance while chasing trifles; and “In Other Rooms, Other Wonders,” by Daniyal Mueenuddin (W.W. Norton & Company), a collection of beautifully crafted stories that exposes the Western reader to the hopes, dreams and dramas of an array of characters in feudal Pakistan, resulting in both an aesthetic and cultural achievement.

Impac shortlist announced for 2010

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/apr/12/impac-shortlist-joseph-oneill-marilynne-robinson

Impac shortlist led by Joseph O'Neill and Marilynne Robinson

'Sloppy' novels by celebrated writers discarded in favour of work by less established names

Marilynne Robinson and Joseph O'Neill

Marilynne Robinson and Joseph O'Neill. Photograph: Reuters/Sophia Evans

The Irish writer Joseph O'Neill and the American Marilynne Robinson head an eight-strong shortlist for the world's richest literary award, the €100,000 (£88,000) Impac prize.

Selected from a longlist of 156 titles nominated by public libraries around the world, they are joined by the British writers Robert Edric, Ross Raisin and Zoë Heller. After the traditional cull of esteemed names, with writers such as Philp Roth, Salman Rushdie and José Saramago falling at the longlist stage, the rest of the shortlist is made up of novels in translation. In the event of a win for the French author Muriel Barbery, the German Christoph Hein or the Dutch writer Gerbrand Bakker, the prize will be split, with the winning translator taking home €25,000.

Speaking on the phone this morning, one of the judges, Anne Fine, said because of its wide-ranging, international nature, the panel "did not agonise over some of the big books at all".

"I am often amazed by how sloppy the books by massive names are," she said. "Sometimes we took a deep breath before agreeing that probably this book, had it been written by a debut author, would not have been looked at."

Along with her fellow judges – the Irish academic Eve Patten, the Djiboutian author Abdourahman Waberi, the South African writer Zoë Wicomb and the Dublin-based author Anatoly Kudryavitsky – Fine quickly whittled the longlist down to a varied list of "around 50" titles. "It's just a mystery how weird books are, and how far the styles and subjects range," she continued which makes things "difficult at this stage. One sort of book, done absolutely perfectly, has to be compared with another which has a totally different style and reach."

Fine confessed that she couldn't remember the proportion of books that were first published in languages other than English. "I take the simple-minded view that you shouldn't notice it's in translation," she explained, "and that if you do, something's gone a little bit wrong".

According to Fine, when it came to the "invidious decisions" which accompany the construction of any shortlist "readability did win out". "If it's not a good read, then it's not a good book," she said.

Marilynne Robinson is shortlisted for Home, an exploration of the secrets and evasions of family life which was the runaway winner of the 2009 Orange prize. It returns to the 1950s rural Iowa of her second novel, Gilead, examining the same events from a different perspective. Joseph O'Neill's Netherland, which was longlisted for the Booker prize and won the 2009 PEN/Faulkner award, views the city that he has made his home, New York, through the lens of the cricket played by Caribbean and south Asian immigrants in inhospitable parks in the outer boroughs.

Zoë Heller is another New York resident who found it impossible to resist the lure of the Big Apple, setting her study of a dysfunctional family, The Believers, in Manhattan. Robert Edric and Christoph Hein focus on the legacy of war, with Edric's In Zodiac Light charting the mental disintegration of the poet Ivor Gurney in a Dartford mental hospital after the first world war, while Hein's Settlement traces the transformation of a refugee and the provincial town he winds up in after the upheavals of the second world war. Muriel Barbery's The Elegance of the Hedgehog, which tells the story of an ugly, plump concierge and a 12-year-old girl who plans to commit suicide on her 13th birthday, was an unlikely hit in France, where it spent 102 weeks on the bestseller list.

With debut novelists Michael Thomas and Rawi Hage winning the Impac award in 2008 and 2009, Ross Raisin and Gerbrand Bakker can look forward to the prize ceremony on 17 June with keen anticipation. Bakker's first novel, The Twin, is the bleak story of family discord in 1970s rural Holland, while Raisin travels to the Yorkshire moors for God's Own Country, which garnered him a place on the shortlist for the Guardian first book award.

click on this to read it------