LONDON.- Paul Murrays The Bee Sting, a tragicomedy about a family on the brink of financial ruin, and Jonathan Escofferys If I Survive You, which explores an American of Jamaican descents struggles with identity, are among six titles shortlisted for this years Booker Prize one of the highest profile awards in literature.
The shortlist, announced during an event at the National Portrait Gallery in London on Thursday, also includes Chetna Maroos Western Lane, about a squash prodigy coping with grief, and Paul Hardings This Other Eden, about an isolated mixed-race community that is troubled by outsiders.
Sarah Bernsteins Study for Obedience, about a woman who travels to her brothers home only to find that the local population is scared of her, and Paul Lynchs Prophet Song, in which Ireland is reimagined as a totalitarian state, are the other two titles.
The six books all gestured at the unease of our moment, said Esi Edugyan, a novelist and the chair of this years judging panel. The novels included portraits of societies pushed to the edge of tolerance and unflinching examinations of generational trauma, Edugyan added in a news release announcing the list.
The Booker Prize, which was founded in 1969, is awarded each year to the author of a novel written in English and published in Britain or Ireland. It regularly helps birth literary stars. Last year, Shehan Karunatilaka, a Sri Lankan author, won for The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida, a satire exploring the trauma of his countrys civil war.
Other recent winners include Damon Galgut, Douglas Stuart and Bernardine Evaristo.
The 13-strong longlist for this years prize, announced in August, was notable for containing four debut novels, and lacking household names. Sebastian Barrys Old Gods Time, about a policeman whose quiet retirement is interrupted by an old case, was the highest-profile title.
Barry did not make Thursdays shortlist. Robert Webb, an actor, author and one of the judges, said at a news conference that omitting Barrys novel had been very difficult but there are only six places.
Of the four longlisted debuts, only two Maroos Western Lane and Escofferys If I Survive You survived what Edugyan said were 4 1/2 hours of very collegiate, but intense, deliberations. We got there in the end, Edugyan added: Everybody was still speaking to each other.
The judges, who also include actor Adjoa Andoh, poet Mary Jean Chan and Shakespearean scholar James Shapiro, will now read the shortlisted books a final time before announcing the winner during a ceremony in London on Nov. 26. The winning author will receive 50,000 pounds (about $61,400).
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.