The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize 2009
For immediate release, Wednesday 18 February 2009
The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize 2009
Regional shortlists announced
Aravind Adiga makes it a double with nominations
for Best Book and Best First Book in South East Asia and the
Pacific.
www.commonwealthfoundation.com/cwp
Organised by the Commonwealth Foundation with the support of the Macquarie Group Foundation
The shortlists for the 2009 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Best Book and Best First Book from South East Asia and the South Pacific were announced today, 18 February 2009.
Aravind Adiga who has
been nominated for both Best Book and Best First Book joins
leading Australian writers Helen Garner and Tim Winton in
the line-up for the £10,000 prize.
The full shortlists
are:
Best Book Award
Aravind Adiga Between the
Assassinations Picador India Australia
Helen Garner The
Spare Room Text Publishing Australia
Joan London The
Good Parents Vintage Australia
Paula Morris Forbidden
Cities Penguin New Zealand
Christos Tsiolkas The
Slap Allen & Unwin Australia
Tim Winton Breath
Hamish Hamilton Australia
Best First Book
Award
Aravind Adiga The White Tiger Atlantic Books
Australia
Nam Le The Boat
Hamish Hamilton Australia
Mo Zhi Hong The Year of the
Shanghai Shark Penguin NZ
Bridget Van der
Zijpp Misconduct Victoria University
Press NZ
Preeta Samarasan Evening is the Whole Day Fourth
Estate Malaysia
Ashley Sievwright The Shallow End
Clouds of Magellan Australia
The judging panel for the South East Asia and the South Pacific region was chaired by Dr Anne Brewster (Australia). She was joined by judges Dr Lydia Wevers (New Zealand) and Dr Boey Kim Cheng (Australia).
Dr Brewster commented:
‘The unusually
high number of entries from acclaimed and well-established
writers in this year’s Best Book category is reflected in
the outstanding shortlist which includes Helen Garner, Joan
London, Tim Winton, Christos Tsiolkas and the Man Booker
award-winning author Aravind Adiga. Alongside these names
is an impressive collection of short stories by Paula Morris
(Ngati Wai). Adiga, in a year of abundance, is also
shortlisted in the Best First Book. The judges are pleased
to note several new authors from Asia in this year’s
entries in the First Book category, two of whom are
shortlisted.’
The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, a much
valued and sought-after award, aims to reward the best
Commonwealth fiction written in English, by both established
and new writers, and to take their works to a global
audience.
The two regional winners from South East Asia and the South Pacific that emerge from the shortlists will be announced on 11 March 2009. These two winners will then enter the final phase of the competition and go on to compete head to head with the other six finalists from Africa, Canada and the Caribbean and Europe and South Asia for the overall Best Book and Best First Book award.
The two overall winners, chosen by an international panel of six judges coming together in New Zealand, will be announced on 16 May at the Auckland Writers’ and Readers Festival (AWRF).
Each of the regional winners will receive £1,000 and in addition be invited to take part in a week-long series of community events and public readings alongside the final judging in New Zealand, culminating in the announcement of the two overall winners for Best First Book and Best Book.
The overall Best Book winner will receive £10,000 and the overall Best First Book winner will receive £5,000.
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