The Man Booker International Prize is a biennial international literary prize of £60,000 awarded to a living author for a body of work published in English (or generally available in English translation); however, the winner can be from any country around the world.
2013 is the fifth year the Man Booker International Prize is being awarded. Previous winners include well-known and somewhat expected names, from Doris Lessing and Milan Kundera to Amos Oz and Joyce Carol Oate, but this year the literary public agrees that most of the finalists are quite surprising.
This is the first year there have been five judges instead of three, reading their way around the world to find candidates. No one can nominate or submit candidates for the prize other than by the judges’ who have chosen some unexpected authors this year.
Finalists Announced
The finalists were announced at the end of January by chair of judges Sir Christopher Ricks at the DSC Jaipur Literary Festival. Check out each finalist’s odds and place your bets at William Hill Sportsbook. More.
Subscribe to the translation news daily digest here. See more translation news.
Comments about this article