And the tone of the commentary around the announcement emphasizes the Booker’s commitment to its “evolved” state, open to writers beyond the UK and Commonwealth, providing they were writing novels in English and published in the UK.
This is the change made at the end of 2013, intended, according to the foundation, “to embrace the English language in all its vigor, its vitality, its versatility and its glory.” The program has endured sharp criticism at times for its expanded footing, but with its new US-based sponsorship from the California-based Crankstart charity created by Michael Moritz and Harriet Heyman, there’s no sign of a retreat to the earlier, less internationalized approach.
Authors in this round of the 2019 program alone are from the UK, Canada, Ireland, Nigeria, the United States, Mexico, Italy, India, and Turkey.
The new longlist for the world’s leading
prize for fiction in English was chosen from 151 novels published in the
UK or Ireland between October 1, 2018, and September 30 of this year.
The Booker Prize for Fiction, first awarded in 1969, is open to writers
of any nationality, writing in English and published in the UK or
Ireland.
The winner of the 2019 Booker Prize receives £50,000 (US$62,180) and
normally benefits from a significant boost in sales and visibility, of
course. In the week following the 2018 winner announcement–you’ll find Publishing Perspectives’ coverage here –sales of Milkman by
Anna Burns increased by 880 percent from 963 in the week prior to the
announcement to 9,446 in the week following the announcement, then a
further 99 percent (9,446 to 18,786) the following week.“There are Nobel candidates and debutants on this list. There are no favorites; they are all credible winners.”Peter FlorenceThe total number of copies of Milkman sold, across all formats, is currently 546,500. Milkman has also now sold into nearly 40 languages, in Europe and many parts of Asia.
The shortlist of six books is scheduled to be announced on September 3 at a morning news conference in the British capital.
The shortlisted authors each receive £2,500 (US$3,109) and a specially bound edition of their book.
The 2019 winner is to be
announced on October 14, shortly before this year’s Frankfurter
Buchmesse (October 16 to 20) at an awards ceremony once more set at
London’s Guildhall. The ceremony is expected to be broadcast by the BBC.
Booker Prize 2019 Longlist
Author | Country | Title | Publisher/Imprint | |||||||
Margaret Atwood | Canada | The Testaments | Vintage, Chatto & Windus | |||||||
Kevin Barry | Ireland | Night Boat to Tangier | Canongate Books | |||||||
Oyinkan Braithwaite | Nigeria | My Sister, The Serial Killer | Atlantic Books | |||||||
Lucy Ellmann | USA/UK | Ducks, Newburyport | Galley Beggar Press | |||||||
Bernadine Evfaristo | UK | Girl, Woman, Other | Hamish Hamilton | |||||||
John Lanchester | UK | The Wall | Faber & Faber | |||||||
Deborah Levy | UK | The Man Who Saw Everything | Hamish Hamilton | |||||||
Valeria Luiselli | Mexico/Italy | Lost Children Archive | 4th Estate | |||||||
Chigozie Obioma | Nigeria | An Orchestra of Minorities | Little, Brown | |||||||
Max Porter | UK | Lanny | Faber & Faber | |||||||
Salman Rushdie | UK/India | Quichotte | Jonathan Cape | |||||||
Elif Shafak | UK/Turkey | 10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World | Viking | |||||||
Jeanette Winterson | UK | Frankissstein | Jonathan Cape |