Man Booker Prize 2011 longlist announced – from official booker website
Four first time novelists selected
26 July 2011
The longlist for the 2011 Man Booker Prize for Fiction - the ‘Man Booker
Dozen' - is announced today, Tuesday 26 July. The 13 books on the list
include: one former Man Booker Prize winner; two previously shortlisted
writers and one longlisted author; four first time novelists and three
Canadian writers. The list also includes three new publishers to the
prize - Oneworld, Sandstone Press and Seren Books.
The titles were chosen by a panel of five judges chaired by author and
former Director-General of MI5, Dame Stella Rimington.
A total of 138 books, seven of which were called in by the judges, were
considered for the ‘Man Booker Dozen' longlist. They are:
Julian Barnes The
Sense of an Ending (Jonathan Cape - Random House)
Sebastian Barry On
Canaan's Side (Faber)
Carol Birch
Jamrach's Menagerie (Canongate Books)
Patrick deWitt The
Sisters Brothers (Granta)
Esi Edugyan Half
Blood Blues (Serpent's Tail - Profile)
Yvvette Edwards A
Cupboard Full of Coats (Oneworld)
Alan Hollinghurst
The Stranger's Child (Picador - Pan Macmillan)
Stephen Kelman
Pigeon English (Bloomsbury)
Patrick McGuinness
The Last Hundred Days (Seren Books)
A.D. Miller
Snowdrops (Atlantic)
Alison Pick Far to
Go (Headline Review)
Jane Rogers The
Testament of Jessie Lamb (Sandstone Press)
D.J. Taylor Derby
Day (Chatto & Windus - Random House)
The chair of judges, Dame Stella Rimington, comments:
'We are delighted by
the quality and breadth of our longlist, which emerged from an
impassioned discussion. The list ranges from the Wild West to
multi-ethnic London via post-Cold War Moscow and Bucharest, and includes
four first novels.'
The four first time novelists on the list are Stephen Kelman, A.D.
Miller, Yvvette Edwards and Patrick McGuinness. Canadian author Alison
Pick, like McGuinness, is a published poet and is joined by fellow
Canadians, Patrick deWitt and Esi Edugyan, on the longlist.
The list includes one former winner, Alan Hollinghurst, who won the
prize in 2004 for
The Line of Beauty. He was also shortlisted in 1994 for
The Folding Star.
Two previously shortlisted authors also make the list: Irish
writer Sebastian Barry (The
Secret Scripture, 2008 and
A Long Long Way,
2005) and Julian Barnes (Arthur
and George, 2005,
England, England,
1998 and Flaubert's
Parrot, 1984). Carol Birch was longlisted in 2003 for
Turn Again Home.
The shortlist of six authors will be announced on Tuesday 6
September at a press conference at Man Group's London headquarters.
The winner of the 2011 Man Booker Prize for Fiction will be announced on
Tuesday 18 October at a dinner at London's Guildhall and will be
broadcast on the BBC.