BOOKER PRIZE WINNER 2013
ELEANOR CATTON |
Eleanor Catton, the
28-year old author from New Zealand has won the Man Booker prize 2013 for her
novel, The Luminaries, published by Granta.
She is not only the
youngest novelist to win the coveted literary prize, but has set a new record
for the longest winning novel. The Luminaries is 852 pages.
The prize was
announced by Robert Macfarlane, Chair of the panel of judges, live on BBC
News from London’s Guildhall. The Duchess of Cornwall presented Ms. Catton
with a trophy, and Emmanuel Roman, Chief Executive of Man presented her with a
cheque for £50,000.
Ms. Catton is also the
last winner of the Booker prize that is presently confined to writers from the
Commonwealth countries and Ireland. From next year, the prize will be opened up
to writers from all countries.
The Luminaries is a
murder mystery set in New Zealand during the gold-rush of the late 19 century,
with astrology a running theme through the book. It was described by Mr.
Macfarlane in his announcement speech as being “animated by a weird struggle
between compulsion and conversion: within its pages, men and women proceed
according to their fixed fates, while gold – as flakes, nuggets, coins and bars
– ceaselessly shifts its shapes around them.”
Despite its size, the
book is “as intricately structured as an orrery. Each section is half the
length of its predecessor, right down to the final, astonishing pages,” Mr.
Macfarlane said.
The judges returned to
the book three times, he said, and it took just under two hours to decide on
the winner. "We have dug into it and the yield it has offered at each new
reading has been extraordinary."
Ms. Catton described
her immediate reaction to the news of her win as seeing a “white wall,” even as
she searched her bag – she had bought a new one as her book would not fit into
the old one – for the piece of paper on which she had written her acceptance
speech.
“With The Luminaries I
had a question that I wanted to ask, and the question led me in my research
from book to book, and in my writing from scene to scene, and I still do not
feel that I have answered the question in a definitive sense, but the book is
the answer to that question,” Ms. Catton said at the post-event press
conference.
The question, she
said, “has to do with self-knowledge, and the degree to which the knowledge of
your own destiny corrupts a person. A lot of the characters in the book are
engaged with their own past.”
Ms. Catton was just 25
when she started writing The Luminaries, her second novel. Her debut novel The
Rehearsal (2008) was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and the
Dylan Thomas Prize, and longlisted for the Orange Prize. She is the second New
Zealander to win the Booker, after Keri Hulme for The Bone People in 1985.
This year’s shortlist
for the prize has been described as among the best in the Booker’s history. It
included Harvest, by Jim Crace; The Last Testament of Mary, a 100-page novella
by Colm Toibin; A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki; The Lowland by Jhumpa
Lahiri; and We Need New Names by NoViolet Bulawayo.
Eleanor Catton was
born in Canada and raised in New Zealand. She currently lives in Auckland
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