International Booker Prize

The International Booker Prize (formerly known as the Man Booker International Prize) is an international literary award hosted in the United Kingdom. The introduction of the International Prize to complement the Man Booker Prize, as the Booker Prize was then known, was announced in June 2004.[1] Sponsored by the Man Group, from 2005 until 2015 the award was given every two years to a living author of any nationality for a body of work published in English or generally available in English translation.[2] It rewarded one author's "continued creativity, development and overall contribution to fiction on the world stage",[3] and was a recognition of the writer's body of work rather than any one title.

International Booker Prize
Inaugural winner Ismail Kadare
Awarded forBest work of fiction translated into English and published in the UK or Ireland
CountryUnited Kingdom
Presented byBooker Prize Foundation
Reward(s)£50,000
First awarded2005; 19 years ago (2005)
Websitethebookerprizes.com/the-international-booker-prize

Since 2016, the award has been given annually to a single work of fiction or collection of short stories, translated into English and published in the United Kingdom or Ireland, with a £50,000 prize for the winning title, shared equally between author and translator.[4][5]

Crankstart, the charitable foundation of Sir Michael Moritz and his wife, Harriet Heyman began supporting The Booker Prizes on 1 June 2019. From this date, the prizes were known as The Booker Prize and The International Booker Prize. Of their support for The Booker Prize Foundation and the prizes, Moritz commented: "Neither of us can imagine a day where we don’t spend time reading a book. The Booker Prizes are ways of spreading the word about the insights, discoveries, pleasures and joy that spring from great fiction".

History

Pre-2016

Whereas the Man Booker Prize was open only to writers from the Commonwealth, Ireland, and Zimbabwe, the International Prize was open to all nationalities who had work available in English including translations.[6] The award was worth £60,000 and given every two years to a living author's entire body of literature, similar to the Nobel Prize for Literature.[3] The Man Booker International Prize also allowed for a separate award for translation. If applicable, the winning author could choose their translators to receive a prize sum of £15,000.[7]

The 2005 inaugural winner of the prize was Albanian writer Ismail Kadare. Praising its concerted judgement, the journalist Hephzibah Anderson noted that the Man Booker International Prize was "fast becoming the more significant award, appearing an ever more competent alternative to the Nobel".[8]

YearAuthorCountryTranslatorLanguageRef.
2005Ismail Kadare  AlbaniaN/AAlbanian[9]
2007Chinua Achebe  NigeriaN/AEnglish[10]
2009Alice Munro  CanadaN/AEnglish[11]
2011Philip Roth  United StatesN/AEnglish[12]
2013Lydia Davis  United StatesN/AEnglish[13]
2015László Krasznahorkai  HungaryGeorge Szirtes and Ottilie MulzetHungarian[14]

2016 onwards

In July 2015 it was announced that the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize would be disbanded.[4] The prize money from that award would be folded into the Man Booker International Prize, which would henceforth act similarly to the Independent prize: awarding an annual book of fiction translated into English, with the £50,000 prize split between author and translator.[15] Each shortlisted author and translator receives £2,500.[16] Its aim is to encourage publishing and reading of quality works in translation and to highlight the work of translators. Judges select a longlist of 12 or 13 books in March (“the Booker Dozen”), followed by a shortlist of six in April,[17] with the winner announced in May.[18]

YearAuthorCountryTranslatorCountryWorkLanguageRef.
2016Han Kang  South KoreaDeborah SmithUnited KingdomThe Vegetarian
채식주의자
Korean[19]
2017David Grossman  IsraelJessica CohenIsrael/UK/USA Horse Walks Into a Bar
סוס אחד נכנס לבר‎
Hebrew[20]
2018Olga Tokarczuk  PolandJennifer CroftUnited StatesFlights
Bieguni
Polish[21]
2019Jokha al-Harthi  OmanMarilyn BoothUnited StatesCelestial Bodies
سـيّـدات الـقـمـر،
Arabic[22]
2020Marieke Lucas Rijneveld  NetherlandsMichele HutchisonUnited KingdomThe Discomfort of Evening
De avond is ongemak
Dutch[23]
2021David Diop  FranceAnna MoschovakisUnited StatesAt Night All Blood Is Black
Frère d'âme
French[24]
2022Geetanjali Shree  IndiaDaisy RockwellUnited StatesTomb of Sand
रेत समाधि[25]
Hindi[26][27]
2023Georgi Gospodinov  BulgariaAngela RodelUnited Kingdom/ United StatesTime Shelter
Времеубежище
Bulgarian[28]

Nominations 2005–2015

2005

The inaugural Man Booker International Prize was judged by John Carey (Chair), Alberto Manguel and Azar Nafisi.[29] The nominees were announced on 2 June 2005 at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.[3] Albanian novelist Ismail Kadare was named the inaugural International Prize winner in 2005.[29] Head judge, Professor John Carey said Kadare is "a universal writer in the tradition of storytelling that goes back to Homer."[29] Kadare said he was "deeply honoured" at being awarded the prize.[29] Kadare was also able to select a translator to receive an additional prize of £15,000.[29] The writer received his award in Edinburgh on 27 June.[29]

Winner
Nominees

2007

The 2007 prize was judged by Elaine Showalter, Nadine Gordimer and Colm Tóibin.[6] The nominees for the second Man Booker International Prize were announced on 12 April 2007 at Massey College in Toronto.[6] Nigerian author Chinua Achebe was awarded the International Prize for his literary career in 2007.[30] Judge Nadine Gordimer said Achebe was "the father of modern African literature" and that he was "integral" to world literature.[30] Achebe received his award on 28 June in Oxford.[30]

Winner
Nominees

2009

The 2009 prize was judged by Jane Smiley (Chair), Amit Chaudhuri and Andrey Kurkov.[31] The nominees for the third Man Booker International Prize were announced on 18 March 2009 at The New York Public Library.[32] Canadian short story writer Munro was named the winner of the prize in 2009 for her lifetime body of work.[31] Judge Jane Smiley said picking a winner had been "a challenge", but Munro had won the panel over.[31] On Munro's work, Smiley said "Her work is practically perfect. Any writer has to gawk when reading her because her work is very subtle and precise. Her thoughtfulness about every subject is so concentrated."[31] Munro, who said she was "totally amazed and delighted" at her win, received the award at Trinity College Dublin on 25 June.[2][31]

Winner
Nominees

2011

The 2011 prize was judged by Rick Gekoski (Chair), Carmen Callil (withdrew in protest over choice of winner) and Justin Cartwright.[35] The nominees for the fourth Man Booker International Prize were announced on 30 March 2011 at a ceremony in Sydney, Australia.[36] John le Carré asked to be removed from consideration, saying he was "flattered", but that he does not compete for literary prizes.[37] However, judge Rick Gekoski said although he was disappointed that le Carré wanted to withdraw, his name would remain on the list.[37] American novelist Roth was announced as the winner on 18 May 2011 at the Sydney Writers' Festival.[38] Of his win, Roth said "This is a great honour and I'm delighted to receive it."[38] The writer said he hoped the prize would bring him to the attention of readers around the world who are not currently familiar with his body of work.[38] Roth received his award in London on 28 June; however, he was unable to attend in person due to ill health, so he sent a short video instead.[38][39] After Roth was announced as the winner, Carmen Callil withdrew from the judging panel, saying "I don't rate him as a writer at all... in 20 years' time will anyone read him?" Callil later wrote an editorial in The Guardian explaining her position and why she chose to leave the panel.[7][40]

Winner
Nominees

2013

The 2013 prize was judged by Christopher Ricks (Chair), Elif Batuman, Aminatta Forna, Yiyun Li and Tim Parks.[41] The nominees for the fifth Man Booker International Prize were announced on 24 January 2013.[42] Marilynne Robinson was the only writer out of the ten nominees who had been nominated for the prize before.[42] Lydia Davis, best known as a short story writer, was announced as the winner of the 2013 prize on 22 May at a ceremony at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.[43] The official announcement of Davis' award on the Man Booker Prize website described her work as having "the brevity and precision of poetry." Judging panel chair Christopher Ricks commented that "There is vigilance to her stories, and great imaginative attention. Vigilance as how to realise things down to the very word or syllable; vigilance as to everybody's impure motives and illusions of feeling."[44]

Winner
Nominees

2015

The 2015 prize was judged by Marina Warner (Chair), Nadeem Aslam, Elleke Boehmer, Edwin Frank and Wen-chin Ouyang.[45] The nominees for the sixth Man Booker International Prize were announced on 24 March 2015.[45] László Krasznahorkai became the first author from Hungary to receive the Man Booker award. The prize was given to recognise his "achievement in fiction on the world stage". British author Marina Warner, who chaired the panel of judges that selected Krasznahorkai for the award, compared his writing to Kafka and Beckett. Krasznahorkai's translators, George Szirtes and Ottilie Mulzet, shared the £15,000 translators' prize.[46]

Winner
Nominees

Nominations 2016–present

The chair of each year's judging panel is shown in bold text.

2016

The nominees for the seventh Man Booker International Prize were announced on 14 April 2016.[48] The six nominees were chosen from a longlist of thirteen.[49][50] Han became the first Korean author to win the prize and, under the new format for 2016, Smith became the first translator to share the prize. British journalist Boyd Tonkin, who chaired the judging panel, said that the decision was unanimous. He also said of the book "in a style both lyrical and lacerating, it reveals the impact of this great refusal both on the heroine herself and on those around her. This compact, exquisite and disturbing book will linger long in the minds, and maybe the dreams, of its readers."[51]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerHan Kang  South KoreaDeborah SmithThe Vegetarian
채식주의자
Portobello Books
ShortlistJosé Eduardo Agualusa  AngolaDaniel HahnA General Theory of Oblivion
Teoria Geral do Esquecimento
Harvill Secker
Elena Ferrante  ItalyAnn GoldsteinThe Story of the Lost Child
Storia della bambina perduta
Europa Editions
Orhan Pamuk  TurkeyEkin OklapA Strangeness in My Mind
Kafamda Bir Tuhaflık
Faber & Faber
Robert Seethaler  AustriaCharlotte CollinsA Whole Life
Ein ganzes Leben
Picador
Yan Lianke  ChinaCarlos RojasThe Four Books
四書
Chatto & Windus
LonglistMaylis de Kerangal  FranceJessica MooreMend the Living
Réparer les vivants
MacLehose Press
Eka Kurniawan  IndonesiaLabodalih SembiringMan Tiger
Lelaki Harimau
Verso Books
Fiston Mwanza Mujila  Democratic Republic of CongoRoland GlasserTram 83Jacaranda Books
Raduan Nassar  BrazilStefan ToblerA Cup of Rage
Um Copo de Cólera
Penguin Modern Classics
Marie NDiaye  FranceJordan StumpLadivineMacLehose Press
Kenzaburō Ōe  JapanDeborah Boliver BoehmDeath by Water
水死
Atlantic Books
Aki Ollikainen  FinlandEmily Jeremiah & Fleur JeremiahWhite Hunger
Nälkävuosi
Peirene Press

2017

The longlist for the eighth Man Booker International Prize was announced on 14 March 2017, and the shortlist on 20 April 2017. The winner was announced on 14 June 2017.[52][53] Grossman became the first Israeli author to win the prize, sharing the £50,000 award with translator Jessica Cohen. Nick Barley, who is the director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, described the book as "an ambitious high-wire act of a novel [that] shines a spotlight on the effects of grief, without any hint of sentimentality. The central character is challenging and flawed, but completely compelling." The novel won over 126 other contenders.[54]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerDavid Grossman  IsraelJessica CohenA Horse Walks into a Bar
סוס אחד נכנס לבר
Jonathan Cape
ShortlistMathias Énard  FranceCharlotte MandellCompass
Boussole
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Roy Jacobsen  NorwayDon Bartlett & Don ShawThe Unseen
De usynlige
MacLehose Press
Dorthe Nors  DenmarkMisha HoekstraMirror, Shoulder, Signal
Spejl, skulder, blink
Pushkin Press
Amos Oz  IsraelNicholas de LangeJudas
הבשורה על-פי יהודה
Chatto & Windus
Samanta Schweblin  ArgentinaMegan McDowellFever Dream
Distancia de rescate
Oneworld
LonglistWioletta Greg  PolandEliza MarciniakSwallowing Mercury
Guguly
Portobello Books
Stefan Hertmans  BelgiumDavid McKayWar and Turpentine
Oorlog en terpentijn
Harvill Secker
Ismail Kadare  AlbaniaJohn HodgsonThe Traitor's Niche
Kamarja e turpit
Harvill Secker
Alain Mabanckou  FranceHelen StevensonBlack Moses
Petit Piment
Serpent's Tail
Clemens Meyer  GermanyKaty DerbyshireBricks and Mortar
Im Stein
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Jón Kalman Stefánsson  IcelandPhil RoughtonFish Have No Feet
Fiskarnir hafa enga fætur
MacLehose Press
Yan Lianke  ChinaCarlos RojasThe Explosion Chronicles
炸裂志
Chatto & Windus

2018

The longlist for the ninth Man Booker International Prize was announced on 12 March 2018. The shortlist of six books was announced on 12 April 2018 at an event at Somerset House in London. The winner was announced on 22 May 2018 at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Tokarczuk is the first Polish author to win the award,[55] and shared the prize with Croft.[56] Lisa Appignanesi described Tokarczuk as a "writer of wonderful wit, imagination, and literary panache."[57]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerOlga Tokarczuk  PolandJennifer CroftFlights
Bieguni
Fitzcarraldo Editions
ShortlistVirginie Despentes  FranceFrank WynneVernon Subutex 1MacLehose Press
Han Kang  South KoreaDeborah SmithThe White Book
Portobello Books
László Krasznahorkai  HungaryJohn Batki, Ottilie Mulzet & George SzirtesThe World Goes On
Megy a világ
Tuskar Rock Press
Antonio Muñoz Molina  SpainCamilo A. RamirezLike a Fading Shadow
Como la sombra que se va
Tuskar Rock Press
Ahmed Saadawi  IraqJonathan WrightFrankenstein in Baghdad
فرانكشتاين في بغداد
Oneworld
LonglistLaurent Binet  FranceSam TaylorThe 7th Function of Language
La Septième Fonction du langage
Harvill Secker
Javier Cercas  SpainFrank WynneThe Impostor
El impostor
MacLehose Press
Jenny Erpenbeck  GermanySusan BernofskyGo, Went, Gone
Gehen, ging, gegangen
Portobello Books
Ariana Harwicz  ArgentinaSarah Moses & Carolina OrloffDie, My Love
Matate, amor
Charco Press
Christoph Ransmayr  AustriaSimon PareThe Flying Mountain
Der fliegende Berg
Seagull Books
Wu Ming-Yi  TaiwanDarryl SterkThe Stolen Bicycle
單車失竊記
Text Publishing
Gabriela Ybarra  SpainNatasha WimmerThe Dinner Guest
El comensal
Harvill Secker

2019

The longlist for the Man Booker International Prize was announced on 13 March 2019.[58] The shortlist was announced on 9 April 2019.[59] The winner was announced on 21 May 2019; Jokha Alharthi is the first author writing in Arabic to have won the Man Booker International Prize. Bettany Hughes said of Celestial Bodies that, "We felt we were getting access to ideas and thoughts and experiences you aren’t normally given in English. It avoids every stereotype you might expect in its analysis of gender and race and social distinction and slavery."[60]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerJokha Alharthi  OmanMarilyn BoothCelestial Bodies
سيدات القمر
Sandstone Press
ShortlistAnnie Ernaux  FranceAlison L. StrayerThe Years
Les Années
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Marion Poschmann  GermanyJen CallejaThe Pine Islands
Die Kieferninseln
Serpent's Tail
Olga Tokarczuk  PolandAntonia Lloyd-JonesDrive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead
Prowadź swój pług przez kości umarłych
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Juan Gabriel Vásquez  ColombiaAnne McLeanThe Shape of the Ruins
La forma de las ruinas
MacLehose Press
Alia Trabucco Zeran  ChileSophie HughesThe Remainder
La resta
And Other Stories
LonglistCan Xue  ChinaAnnelise Finegan WasmoenLove in the New Millenium
新世纪爱情故事
Yale University Press
Hwang Sok-yong  South KoreaSora Kim-RussellAt Dusk
해질무렵
Scribe
Mazen Maarouf  Palestine
 Iceland
Jonathan WrightJokes for the Gunmen
نكات للمسلحين
Granta
Hubert Mingarelli  FranceSam TaylorFour Soldiers
Quatre soldats
Portobello Books
Samanta Schweblin  ArgentinaMegan McDowellMouthful of Birds
Pájaros en la boca
Oneworld
Sara Stridsberg  SwedenDeborah Bragan-TurnerThe Faculty of Dreams
Drömfakulteten
MacLehose Press
Tommy Wieringa  The NetherlandsSam GarrettThe Death of Murat Idrissi
De dood van Murat Idrissi
Scribe

2020

The longlist for the prize was announced on 27 February 2020.[61] The shortlist was announced 2 April 2020.[62] The winner announcement was originally planned for 19 May 2020, however due to the COVID-19 pandemic it was postponed to 26 August 2020.[63]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerMarieke Lucas Rijneveld  The NetherlandsMichele HutchisonThe Discomfort of Evening
De avond is ongemak
Faber & Faber
ShortlistShokoofeh Azar  IranAnonymousThe Enlightenment of The Greengage Tree
اشراق درخت گوجه سبز
Europa Editions
Gabriela Cabezón Cámara  ArgentinaIona Macintyre & Fiona MackintoshThe Adventures of China Iron
Las aventuras de la China Iron
Charco Press
Daniel Kehlmann  GermanyRoss BenjaminTyllRiverrun, Quercus
Fernanda Melchor  MexicoSophie HughesHurricane Season
Temporada de huracanes
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Yōko Ogawa  JapanStephen SnyderThe Memory Police
密やかな結晶
Harvill Secker
LonglistWillem Anker  South AfricaMichiel HeynsRed Dog
Buys: 'n grensroman
Pushkin Press
Jon Fosse  NorwayDamion SearlsThe Other Name: Septology I – II
Det andre namnet – Septologien I – II
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Nino Haratischvili  Georgia
 Germany
Charlotte Collins & Ruth MartinThe Eighth Life
Das achte Leben (Für Brilka)
Scribe
Michel Houellebecq  FranceShaun WhitesideSerotonin
Sérotonine
William Heinemann
Emmanuelle Pagano  FranceSophie Lewis & Jennifer HigginsFaces on the Tip of My Tongue
Un renard à mains nues
Peirene Press
Samanta Schweblin  ArgentinaMegan McDowellLittle Eyes
Kentukis
Oneworld
Enrique Vila-Matas  SpainMargaret Jull Costa & Sophie HughesMac and His Problem
Mac y su contratiempo
Harvill Secker

2021

The longlist was announced on 30 March 2021, the shortlist on 22 April, and the winning author and translator on 2 June 2021.[64]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerDavid Diop  FranceAnna MoschovakisAt Night All Blood Is Black
Frère d'âme
Pushkin Press
ShortlistMariana Enríquez  ArgentinaMegan McDowellThe Dangers of Smoking in Bed
Los peligros de fumar en la cama
Granta
Benjamín Labatut  ChileAdrian Nathan WestWhen We Cease to Understand the World
Un verdor terrible
Pushkin Press
Olga Ravn  DenmarkMartin AitkenThe Employees
De ansatte
Lolli Editions
Maria Stepanova  RussiaSasha DugdaleIn Memory of Memory
Памяти памяти
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Éric Vuillard  FranceMark PolizzottiThe War of the Poor
La Guerre des pauvres
Picador
LonglistCan Xue  ChinaKaren Gernant & Chen ZepingI Live in the SlumsYale University Press
Nana Ekvtimishvili  GeorgiaElizabeth HeighwayThe Pear Field
მსხლების მინდორი
Peirene Press
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o  KenyaNgũgĩ wa Thiong'oThe Perfect Nine: The Epic of Gikuyu and Mumbi
Kenda Mũiyũru: Rũgano rwa Gĩkũyũ na Mũmbi
Harvill Secker
Jaap Robben  The NetherlandsDavid DohertySummer Brother
Zomervacht
World Editions
Judith Schalansky  GermanyJackie SmithAn Inventory of Losses
Verzeichnis einiger Verluste
MacLehose Press
Adania Shibli  PalestineElisabeth JaquetteMinor Detail
تفصيل ثانوي
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Andrzej Tichý  SwedenNichola SmalleyWretchedness
Eländet
And Other Stories

2022

The longlist was announced on 10 March 2022; the shortlist on 7 April 2022 and the winner on 26 May 2022.[65] Tomb of Sand is the first Hindi-language novel to receive a nomination, and the first novel in an Indian language to win the International Booker Prize.[66]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerGeetanjali Shree  IndiaDaisy RockwellTomb of Sand
रेत समाधि
Tilted Axis Press
ShortlistBora Chung  South KoreaAnton HurCursed Bunny
저주토끼
Honford Star
Jon Fosse  NorwayDamion SearlsA New Name: Septology VI-VII
Eit nytt namn – Septologien VI – VII
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Mieko Kawakami  JapanSam Bett & David BoydHeaven
ヘヴン
Picador
Claudia Piñeiro  ArgentinaFrances RiddleElena Knows
Elena sabe
Charco Press
Olga Tokarczuk  PolandJennifer CroftThe Books of Jacob
Księgi Jakubowe
Fitzcarraldo Editions
LonglistJonas Eika  DenmarkSherilyn HellbergAfter the Sun
Efter solen
Lolli Editions
David Grossman  IsraelJessica CohenMore Than I Love My Life
אתי החיים משחק הרבה
Jonathan Cape
Violaine Huisman  FranceLeslie CamhiThe Book of Mother
Fugitive parce que reine
Scribner
Fernanda Melchor  MexicoSophie HughesParadais
Páradais
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Sang Young Park  South KoreaAnton HurLove in the Big City
대도시의 사랑법
Tilted Axis Press
Norman Erikson Pasaribu  IndonesiaTiffany TsaoHappy Stories, Mostly
Cerita-cerita Bahagia, Hampir Seluruhnya
Tilted Axis Press
Paulo Scott  BrazilDaniel HahnPhenotypes
Marrom e Amarelo
And Other Stories

2023

The longlist was announced on 14 March 2023,[67] the shortlist on 18 April 2023,[68] and the winner on 23 May 2023. Gospodinov's Time Shelter was the first Bulgarian-language book to win the prize.[69]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
WinnerGeorgi Gospodinov  BulgariaAngela RodelTime Shelter
Времеубежище
Weidenfeld & Nicolson
ShortlistEva Baltasar  SpainJulia SanchesBoulderAnd Other Stories
Cheon Myeong-kwan  South KoreaChi-Young KimWhale
고래
Europa Editions
Maryse Condé  FranceRichard PhilcoxThe Gospel According to the New World
L'Évangile du nouveau monde
World Editions
GauZ’  Côte d'IvoireFrank WynneStanding Heavy
Debout-payé
MacLehose Press
Guadalupe Nettel  MexicoRosalind HarveyStill Born
La hija única
Fitzcarraldo Editions
LonglistVigdis Hjorth  NorwayCharlotte BarslundIs Mother Dead
Er mor død
Verso Fiction
Andrey Kurkov  UkraineReuben WoolleyJimi Hendrix Live in Lviv
Львовская гастроль Джими Хендрикса
MacLehose Press
Laurent Mauvignier  FranceDaniel Levin BeckerThe Birthday Party
Histoires de la nuit
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Clemens Meyer  GermanyKaty DerbyshireWhile We Were Dreaming
Als wir träumten
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Perumal Murugan  IndiaAniruddhan VasudevanPyre
பூக்குழி
Pushkin Press
Amanda Svensson  SwedenNichola SmalleyA System So Magnificent It Is Blinding
Ett system så magnifikt att det bländar
Scribe
Zou Jingzhi  ChinaJeremy TiangNinth Building
九栋
Honford Star

2024

The longlist was announced on 11 March 2024, the shortlist on 9 April 2024, while the winner will be revealed on 21 May 2024. The judging panel for this year's prize is chaired by Canadian writer and broadcaster Eleanor Wachtel, and consists of Mojave American poet Natalie Diaz, Sri Lankan British novelist Romesh Gunesekera, South African artist William Kentridge, and American writer, editor and translator Aaron Robertson. On choosing the six shortlisted books, Eleanor Wachtel said, "Our shortlist, while implicitly optimistic, engages with current realities of racism and oppression, global violence and ecological disaster."[70]

AwardAuthorCountryTranslatorTitlePublisherJudges
ShortlistSelva Almada  ArgentinaAnnie McDermottNot a River
No es un río
Charco Press
Jenny Erpenbeck  GermanyMichael HofmannKairosGranta
Ia Genberg [sv]  SwedenKira JosefssonThe Details
Detaljerna
Granta
Hwang Sok-yong  South KoreaSora Kim-Russell and Youngjae Josephine BaeMater 2-10
철도원 삼대
Scribe
Jente Posthuma [nl]  The NetherlandsSarah Timmer HarveyWhat I’d Rather Not Think About
Waar ik liever niet aan denk
Scribe
Itamar Vieira Junior  BrazilJohnny LorenzCrooked Plow
Torto Arado
Verso Books
LonglistRodrigo Blanco Calderón  VenezuelaNoel Hernández González and Daniel HahnSimpatíaSeven Stories Press
Urszula Honek [pl]  PolandKate WebsterWhite Nights
Białe noce
MTO Press
Ismail Kadare  AlbaniaJohn HodgsonA Dictator Calls
Kur sunduesit grinden
Harvill Secker
Andrey Kurkov  UkraineBoris DralyukThe Silver Bone
Самсон и Надежда
MacLehose Press
Veronica Raimo  ItalyLeah JaneczkoLost on Me
Niente di vero
Virago
Domenico Starnone  ItalyOonagh StranskyThe House on Via Gemito
Via Gemito
Europa Editions
Gabriela Wiener  PeruJulia SanchesUndiscovered
Huaco retrato
Pushkin Press

See also

References

External links