Rushdie Snubbed on Booker Shortlist
The six finalists for the Man Booker Prize, considered by many to be the most prestigious award for literary fiction in the English-speaking world, were announced on Tuesday in London with the traditional fanfare.
But this year, as sometimes happens, the shortlist attracted more attention for who was not on it.
“Netherland,” by Joseph O’Neill, a novel set in post-9/11 New York that was a best seller and a critical darling, was omitted from the finalists. “The Lost Dog” by Michelle de Kretser, another favorite from the 13 books on the previously released Booker longlist, also did not make the cut.
More surprising, “The Enchantress of Florence” by Salman Rushdie was not chosen as a finalist, both startling and delighting British critics and subsequently prompting the Booker judges to explain why Mr. Rushdie had been snubbed.
“We’re braced for it,” Louise Doughty, one of five judges on the panel, told The Guardian of London, referring to the anticipated criticism over Mr. Rushdie’s exclusion.
Michael Portillo, the judging panel’s chairman, said: “In the opinion of these five people taken together, Salman Rushdie’s was not one of the top six books for us. We didn’t have a huge debate about it.”
The Booker competition is open to citizens of the British Commonwealth and the Republic of Ireland. The winner, who will receive about $71,000, will be announced on Oct. 14.
Mr. Rushdie, who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth this summer, was the winner of the Booker of Bookers (which celebrated the prize’s 25th anniversary) in 1993 and the Best of the Booker Prize (which celebrated its 40th) in July, each for his 1981 novel, “Midnight’s Children.” But “The Enchantress of Florence” had received some withering reviews in the American press and was a reminder that it has been many years since Mr. Rushdie has had a critical success.
On this year’s Booker shortlist he was passed over for a group of finalists from India, Britain, Australia and Ireland. Two, Aravind Adiga and Steve Toltz, are first-time novelists.
“The White Tiger” by Mr. Adiga is the dark story of class struggle told by an Indian man who murders his employer. It was published in the United States by Free Press. Mr. Adiga, 33, a native of India who spent part of his childhood in Australia, is a former correspondent for Time magazine in India.
“The Secret Scripture” by Sebastian Barry, published in the United States by Viking Adult, tells of an elderly woman and her psychiatrist who write parallel accounts of their meetings and their tragic pasts in modern-day Ireland. Mr. Barry, 53, was born in Dublin and has been shortlisted once before.
“Sea of Poppies” by Amitav Ghosh, to be published in the United States next month by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, is set at the brink of the Opium Wars and tells of a ship full of sailors, Indians and Westerners, who form a bond and begin a long-lasting dynasty. Mr. Ghosh, 52, grew up in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and India, and wrote “The Glass Palace.”
“The Clothes on Their Backs,” written by Linda Grant and published in Britain by Virago Press, is the story of family and morality told by a narrator who was raised by Jewish refugees from Hungary. Ms. Grant, 57, was born in Liverpool and lives in London.
“The Northern Clemency” by Philip Hensher tells of the ties between two families who live in Sheffield in the 1970s and ’80s. It was published in Britain by Fourth Estate and is scheduled to be published in February by Alfred A. Knopf. Mr. Hensher, 43, is the author of five novels and a collection of short stories.
“A Fraction of the Whole,” by Mr. Toltz, was published in the United States by Spiegel & Grau. It tells of a son whose attempt to understand his dead father takes him from Paris cafes to the Thai jungle to the Australian bush. Mr. Toltz, 36, was born in Australia, but has since lived in Montreal, Vancouver, Barcelona and Paris.
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Die debuutbundel The White Tiger van Aravind Adiga,het die 2008 Man Booker-prys gekry. Die finaliste was:
- "The Household Guide to Dying", Debra Adelaide (Jun 2008)
- "The White Tiger", Aravind Adiga (Mar 2008)
- "The Secret Scripture Sebastian Barry (May 2008)
- "Born Yesterday: The News as a Novel", Gordon Burn (Apr 2008)
- "His Illegal Self", Peter Carey (Feb 2008)
- "The Lost Dog", Michelle de Kretser (May 2008)
- "The Spare Room", Helen Garner (Jul 2008)
- "The Northern Clemency", Philip Hensher (Apr 2008)
- "The Outcast", Sadie Jones (Feb 2008)
- "Something to Tell You", Hanif Kureishi (Mar 2008)
- "Deaf Sentence", David Lodge (May 2008)
- "The Witch's Trinity", Erika Mailman (Dec 2007)
- "Company of Liars", Karen Maitland (Jan 2008)
- "Pilcrow", Adam Mars-Jones (Apr 2008)
- "We Are Now Beginning Our Descent", James Meek (Feb 2008)
- "Netherland", Joseph O'Neill, (May 2008)
- "God's Own Country", Ross Raisin (Mar 2008)
- "The Enchantress of Florence", Salman Rushdie (Apr 2008)
- "Breath", Tim Winton (May 2008)
- "Carpentaria", Alexis Wright (Mar 2008)
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