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This Article is From Oct 14, 2019

Booker Prize Pits Margaret Atwood, Salman Rushdie Against 4 Emerging Stars

The title of best work of English-language fiction published in the United Kingdom and Ireland has launched careers and courted controversy since its creation in 1969.

Booker Prize Pits Margaret Atwood, Salman Rushdie Against 4 Emerging Stars
This year's shortlist features six novelists -- four of them women
London:

Britain's storied Booker Prize will pit literary giants Margaret Atwood and Salman Rushdie against four emerging stars when it unveils the winner on Monday on its 50th anniversary award.

The title of best work of English-language fiction published in the United Kingdom and Ireland has launched careers and courted controversy since its creation in 1969.

Past laureates have ranged from celebrated writers such as Ian McEwan and Julian Barnes to Kazuo Ishiguro and Roddy Doyle.

Paul Beatty became the first American winner when the Booker bowed to pressure and began including authors from outside the British commonwealth, Ireland and Zimbabwe in 2013.

This year's shortlist features six novelists -- four of them women -- born across four continents. It is also no longer called the Man Booker because of a sponsorship change.

The five-judge panel includes the writer-broadcaster Afua Hirsch and the British-Chinese novelist and filmmaker Xiaolu Guo.

1,000-page sentence
Canadian author Atwood's sixth Booker nomination comes for "The Testaments", a best-selling sequel to her 1985 dystopian classic "The Handmaid's Tale".

The Guardian said the book, which picks up the tale of three women 15 years on, presents "Atwood at her best".

"It's a question of things escaping from a book to the real world and the author has zero control," the 79-year-old said upon its release last month.

Nominated for the 1986 prize, "The Handmaid's Tale" became an award-winning TV series in 2017, and sales of the English-language edition have topped eight million copies worldwide.

Mr Rushdie, whose contender is called "Quichotte", won the Booker Prize in 1981 for "Midnight's Children".

His tragicomedy this year, inspired by the classic "Don Quixote", is the story of an ageing travelling salesman who falls in love with a TV star and sets off to drive across America on a quest to prove himself worthy of her hand.

Mr Rushdie told HBO last month that he researched the book by "watching all this reality TV, which (the protagonist) loves. I began to understand that it could drive a person crazy".

Nigerian author Chigozie Obioma made the shortlist for "An Orchestra of Minorities" -- his second novel after "The Fishermen", which was shortlisted in 2015.

Set in Nigeria -- the author's homeland -- and Cyprus, it is a tragic love story with a strong sense of foreboding throughout.

Narrated by the main character's chi spirit, it is richly poetic and deeply anchored in the mysticism of Nigeria's Igbo people.

Lucy Ellmann challenges readers with "Ducks, Newburyport" -- a story made up almost entirely of one sentence that absorbs readers and is occasionally funny.

It is a stream of thoughts from a woman making pies in her home in Ohio. The musings weave between her family, US politics, her dead parents and pets, pollution in rivers, and are interspersed with references to popular culture.

Anglo-Nigerian author Bernardine Evaristo is shortlisted for "Girl, Woman, Other" -- about the lives of black British families with roots across the country, Africa and the Caribbean.

It tells the tale of 12 women that "brims with vitality," according to the Financial Times.

Elif Shafak, the most widely read female author in Turkey, brings Istanbul's underworld to life through the recollections of sex worker Tequila Leila in "10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World".

The entire work describes the last 10 minutes of conscious thought of a dying prostitute that The Times calls "surprisingly uplifting".

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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