Home 5 Articles and Reports 5 International Booker Prize 2023 Longlist Announced

International Booker Prize 2023 Longlist Announced

by | Mar 16, 2023 | Articles and Reports, News

International Booker Prize announces longlist

 

The longlist for the International Booker Prize 2023 has been announced. It features work from Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America, the oldest writer ever to be nominated, three writers who appear in English for the first time, and books translated from 11 languages.

Other highlights include the first nominations for books originally written in Bulgarian, Catalan and Tamil; a wife and husband author-translator team; works originating in 12 countries; the oldest writer ever to be nominated for the prize, aged 89; one of Ukraine’s best-known writers, who has vowed to stop writing in Russian; a film director, four poets, two former security guards; a writer who had declared himself ‘dead’; elements of Korean fairy tale, French horror, Caribbean gospel, Indian melodrama, Scandinavian saga; and East Germany’s answer to Trainspotting.

The full list is as follows:  The Birthday Party by Laurent Mauvignier, translated from French by Daniel Levin Becker; While We Were Dreaming by Clemens Meyer, translated from German by Katy Derbyshire and Still Born by Guadalupe Nettel, translated from Spanish by Rosalind Harvey.  These three novels are all published by Fitzcarraldo Editions.

Jimi Hendrix Live in Lviv by Andrey Kurkov, translated from Russian by Reuben Woolley and Standing Heavy by GauZ’, translated from French by Frank Wynne, both published by MacLehose Press.

Eva Baltasar, writing in Catalan, and translator Julia Sanches for Boulder, published by And Other Stories; the Korean author of Whale, Cheon Myeong-kwan, and translator Chi-Young Kim (Europa Editions); and Maryse Condé, author of The Gospel According to the New World, writing in French, translated by Richard Philcox (World Editions).

 Time Shelter by Georgi Gospodinov, translated from Bulgarian by Angela Rodel (W&N); Is Mother Dead by Vigdis Hjorth, translated from Norwegian by Charlotte Barslund (Verso Fiction) are also longlisted, alongside Pyre by Perumal Murugan, translated from Tamil by Aniruddhan Vasudevan (Pushkin Press), A System So Magnificent It Is Blinding by Amanda Svensson, translated from Swedish by Nichola Smalley (Scribe UK) and Ninth Building by Zou Jingzhi, translated from Chinese by Jeremy Tiang (Honford Star).

 The shortlist will be announced at the London Book Fair on 18        April and the winner will be announced at a ceremony held at Sky Garden in London on Tuesday 23 May. The winners’ prize purse is £50,000; £25,000 for the author and £25,000 for the translator(s).

 

Recent News

15May
Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal

Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal

  Authors including the Nobel Prize-winner Kasho Ishiguro and publishers including Joanna Prior, CEO of Pan Macmillan have signed an open letter urging UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to enforce copyright law and not let the giant tech companies ‘steal’ authors’ work to train AI models.   The letter reads: “We will lose an immense […]

15May
Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library organised a symposium exploring the often-overlooked contributions of women to the genre of travel literature. Bringing together leading researchers and academics, the event examined how female travellers from the 19th and early 20th centuries used travel—and the literature it inspired—as a means of personal empowerment, self-discovery and the reimagining of prevailing social […]

15May
British Book Award Goes to Atwood

British Book Award Goes to Atwood

Canadian author Margaret Atwood has been awarded the 2025 British Book Award for Freedom to Publish, recognizing her unwavering commitment to free expression and outspoken stance against censorship. Atwood, best known for her seminal novel The Handmaid’s Tale, accepted the honor via a recorded video message.   In her speech, the 85-year-old author expressed deep […]

Related Posts

Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library organised a symposium exploring the often-overlooked contributions of women to the genre of travel literature. Bringing together leading researchers and academics, the event examined how female travellers from the 19th and early 20th centuries...

British Book Award Goes to Atwood

British Book Award Goes to Atwood

Canadian author Margaret Atwood has been awarded the 2025 British Book Award for Freedom to Publish, recognizing her unwavering commitment to free expression and outspoken stance against censorship. Atwood, best known for her seminal novel The Handmaid’s Tale,...

AI and IP Drive China’s Reading Market

AI and IP Drive China’s Reading Market

China's online literature industry continued its rapid growth in 2024, with the domestic reading market generating 43.06 billion yuan (around $5.96 billion) in revenue, a rise of 6.8 percent year-on-year, according to a report by the Chinese Academy of Social...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this

Pin It on Pinterest