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Rank outsider triumphs to win £50,000 Booker prize

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Published Date:
17 October 2007
WITH a novel the bookies had judged a 12-1 rank outsider, Dublin writer Anne Enright last night became the first Irishwoman to win the Man Booker Prize.
Before the announcement, Enright's fourth novel, The Gathering, had been viewed by many critics as an unlikely candidate for the £50,000 award.

Its themes, after all, are hardly inventive, original or particularly contemporary - the sexual secrets concealed over a couple of generations by a large Irish family that come to a head when one of them commits suicide.

The gathering of the title is that of the 12-strong Hegarty clan for the funeral of Liam, their heavy-drinking brother who was probably - doubts are sown about the episode right at the start - a victim of sexual abuse when he was a child in the mid-1960s.

The story is told by Veronica, who was the nearest in age to Liam, and is now a well-to-do journalist in a disillusioning marriage. Added to her grief at losing her brother is her guilt that she told no-one about a childhood episode in which she saw him being abused by their landlord.

"We found it a very powerful, uncomfortable and, at times, angry book," chairman of the judges Howard Davies said last night. "It is an unflinching look at a grieving family in tough and striking language."

Earlier, many commentators had assumed that the main contest for the prize would be between Ian McEwan's novel On Chesil Beach, which has outsold everything else on the shortlist combined, and Mister Pip, the Commonwealth Prize-winning book by New Zealand writer Lloyd Jones.

Until last weekend, when McEwan drew level on the expectation that he might be the first British writer to win the prize twice, Jones's novel had been the favourite.

Catherine Lockerbie, the director of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, who programmed events with Enright in 2001, 2004 and again this year, said last night: "I'm overjoyed she's won.

"Anne Enright totally deserves to be top of our reading list and now she will be. Her turn of phrase, her eye for detail constantly shift your perspective - and what more can you ask from a writer?"

A LITERARY LANDMARK

SINCE it was founded in 1968 the awarding of the Booker prize, originally called the Booker McConnell and now the Man Booker, is one of the most important events in the publishing year.

Just being included on the shortlist can boost sales, while a win gives an author the honour of being recognised as one of the world's finest writers in the English language.

Past winners include Salman Rushdie, Iris Murdoch, VS Naipaul, Ben Okri and William Golding.

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  • Last Updated: 16 October 2007 11:34 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Booker Prize
 
1

Scullion,

Canada 17/10/2007 00:43:18

Still too subjective to be regarded as anything more than a trumped up Oscar. The Nobel Prize is much more powerful as it gives a nod to a lifetime of work and is more a laud to the author and not just the book.

2

Steve Lowman,

Aberystwyth 17/10/2007 01:15:40

Yes, it's a prize for book. I think we knew that, Scullion. I was so pleased Doris Lessing got the Nobel, and now I think Anne Enright deserves our hearty congratulations for getting the Booker. I will look forward to reading her book, and from what the Booker judges have said, it sounds like we should wish more power to her pen.

3

Boy Wonder,

17/10/2007 07:09:28

It's a crock is what it is!

Has anyone ever read the Booker Prize winners' books?

They tend to be turgid, insipid, unoriginal, adjective and adverb driven ... and overlong due to too much unnecessary verbiage.

I've started so many of them and by halfway through, felt like what Dorothy Parker said, "This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force." and "Tonstant weader fwowed up!"

Honestly, who are these people who choose these books? Who selects them and what is so special about them, they can judge one book better then the rest??

Did anyone get right through Rushdie's winner "The Satanic Verses"? I did and was tempted to put a fatwah on his head myself. Not for the "verses" particularly, but for his whole body of turgid work!

So Anne Enright won this year, with a book that is described as "hardly inventive, original or particularly contemporary". What did it win for then?

Don't think I'll get this one. I've been let down too often.

4

Cadgers,

Perth 17/10/2007 07:23:49

#3 Ach BW, you beat me to it again :-) All these books that win all these prizes are so precious they disappear up their own bookends.

5

Nick_Byrne,

Glasgow 17/10/2007 09:42:09

I'm surprised it won they already said it was "rank".

6

Masque,

17/10/2007 09:44:22

Why don't YOUSE write a book then, BW and Cadgers??

7

Jude_S,

Brisbane 17/10/2007 10:29:49

I believe Salman Rushdie won a Booker for Midnight's Children, not The Satanic Verses. Turgid? No way!

Jude

8

Conan the Librarian,

17/10/2007 11:23:20

They do tend to be on rather depressing subjects.

Prefer Terry Pratchett myself.

9

Cadgers,

Perth 17/10/2007 12:52:36

#6 I'd rather read than write Masque, and we were only expressing our opinions.

10

Boy Wonder,

17/10/2007 14:28:49

#7 Jude_S ... Ooops!!! My mistook. But, Midnight's Children was so awful anyway, it hardly matters!

#6 Masque ... what makes you think I haven't already written a book ... or books? For all you know ... I could be the much-derided author, Ian Rankin!!! I'm not ... but you see my point??

Don't assume dear chap. That's MY job!! :)


 

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