Commonwealth Writers’ Prize Winner Meets the Queen
Commonwealth Writers’ Prize Winner Meets HM the Queen
New Zealand writer, Lloyd Jones, will have an audience with Her Majesty the Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday, 24 October 2007.
The audience is part of Jones’ prize for winning the 2007 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, Overall Best Book Award, for his novel, Mister Pip. The £10,000 cash prize was awarded in May as part of the Calabash International Literary Festival in Treasure Beach, Jamaica.
The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, awarded annually, aims to promote new voices, reward achievement and encourage wider readership and greater literacy, thereby increasing appreciation of different cultures and building understanding between cultures
For the second consecutive year, the overall winner of the prize has gone on to receive further accolades – Mister Pip has recently been included on the Man Booker Prize shortlist - highlighting that the international judging process put in place by the Commonwealth Foundation is at the forefront of recognising talent, identifying new voices and helping these books reach global audiences.
The 2006 overall winner, The Secret River by Kate Grenville, went on to be shortlisted for the Man Booker and to become a bestseller in both Australia and the UK. The CWP Best First Book Award is a showcase for emerging literary talent with many of the winners, such as Zadie Smith, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Mark Haddon, going on to become international bestselling writers.
The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize is organised by the Commonwealth Foundation with the support of the Macquarie Foundation across all four regions.
Mister Pip by
Lloyd Jones
Lloyd Jones’ novel is set mainly in a
small village on Bougainville, where Matilda attends the
school set up by the only white man in the village, Mr
Watts. By his own admission he’s not much of a teacher and
proceeds to educate the children by reading them Great
Expectations. Matilda falls in love with the novel and
the promise of the next chapter is what keeps her going;
Pip’s story protects her from the horror of what is
happening around her – helicopters menacing the skies
above the village and rebel raids on the ground.
After
several visits to the village by soldiers, the book goes
missing and is then destroyed. Mr Watts encourages the
children to retell the story, the whole being constructed
from their remembered fragments. Later, when she has fled
the island for Australia, Matilda reaches for a copy of
Great Expectations in the school library and realises
that Mr Watts was reading them his own version of the text,
another ‘invention’ of the original.
Lloyd Jones was
born in 1955 and lives in Wellington. He is currently
living in Berlin as recipient of the Creative New Zealand
Berlin Writers’ Residency. In July, he also won the
Montana New Zealand Book Award for fiction or poetry.
ENDS