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London, Sep 7 (IANS): Indian writer Indra
Sinha's book "Animal's People",
which narrates a fictionalised story of
a Bhopal gas victim, has been shortlisted
with five others for this year's Man Booker
Prize worth 50,000 pounds.
The winner of the prestigious prize will
be announced on Oct 16 at an awards ceremony
at the Guildhall, London. Last year's winner
was Kiran Desai's "The Inheritance
of Loss".
Nikita Lalwani, another Indian-origin writer,
whose book, "Gifted", figured
in this year's long list for the prize,
did not make it to the short-list announced
here Thursday evening.
The other five books and writers short-listed
are: "Darkmans" (Nicola Barker),
"The Gathering" (Anne Enright),
"The Reluctant Fundamentalist"
(Mohsin Hamid), "Mister Pip" (Lloyd
Jones), and "On Chesil Beach"
(Ian McEwan).
Bookmakers William Hill have made Lloyd
Jones' "Mister Pip" the favourite
(2/1) to win this year's prize. Indra Sinha's
book is offered the lowest odds (8/1) to
win.
Announcing the short-list, Howard Davies,
Chair of Judges, said: "Selecting a
shortlist this year from what was widely
seen as an exciting long list was a tough
challenge. We hope the choices we have made
after passionate and careful consideration
will attract wide interest."
The panel said: "Indra Sinha is an
engaged campaigning novelist. The book clearly
draws from real life events in Bhopal, but
is a sustained imaginative creation in its
own right, with intriguing parallel use
of new media."
Indra Sinha was born in India on Feb 10,
1950 and spent his childhood in Bombay,
Hyderabad and Rajasthan. As a copywriter
for Collett Dickenson Pearce he won awards
in every major advertising show.
His previous work, "The Cybergypsies",
met with widespread critical acclaim and
he is now a full time writer, living in
southern France with his wife and children.
McEwan's latest novel is a tragic love
story about a couple's wedding night, set
in the 1960s. It has sparked debate in the
literary world because at less than 200
pages, it is considered by many to be a
novella - which would make it ineligible
for the Booker.
The winner receives 50,000 pounds and can
look forward to greatly increased sales
and recognition worldwide. Each of the six
short-listed authors, including the winner,
receives 2,500 pounds and a designer bound
edition of their own book.
The judging panel for the 2007 Man Booker
Prize for Fiction includes Howard Davies,
Director of the London School of Economics
and Political Science; Wendy Cope, poet;
Giles Foden, journalist and author; Ruth
Scurr, biographer and critic and Imogen
Stubbs, actor and writer.
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