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Kiran Desai claims Booker title | Kiran Desai claims Booker title |
(30 minutes later) | |
Kiran Desai has won the UK's leading literary award, the Man Booker Prize, for her novel The Inheritance of Loss. | Kiran Desai has won the UK's leading literary award, the Man Booker Prize, for her novel The Inheritance of Loss. |
She picked up the £50,000 prize after being chosen by a panel of judges from a shortlist of six. | She picked up the £50,000 prize after being chosen by a panel of judges from a shortlist of six. |
Desai beat favourite Sarah Waters - shortlisted for The Night Watch - and fellow nominees Kate Greenville, Hisham Matar, M J Hyland and Edward St Aubyn. | Desai beat favourite Sarah Waters - shortlisted for The Night Watch - and fellow nominees Kate Greenville, Hisham Matar, M J Hyland and Edward St Aubyn. |
Desai, 35, is the youngest female winner of the prize. The Inheritance of Loss is her second novel. | Desai, 35, is the youngest female winner of the prize. The Inheritance of Loss is her second novel. |
She dedicated the novel to her mother and fellow novelist Anita Desai who has herself been nominated for the Booker prize three times, but has never won. | |
I think her mother would be proud Hermione LeeChair of the judges Desai told the BBC her win felt "like a family endeavour". | |
"I wrote this book so much in her company it feels almost like her book," she said. | |
The judges hailed The Inheritance of Loss as "a magnificent novel of humane breadth and wisdom, comic tenderness and powerful political acuteness". | |
Mother's influence | |
Hermione Lee, chairwoman of the judges, said: "I think her mother would be proud. | Hermione Lee, chairwoman of the judges, said: "I think her mother would be proud. |
"It is clear to those of us who have read Anita Desai that Kiran Desai has learned from her mother's work. | "It is clear to those of us who have read Anita Desai that Kiran Desai has learned from her mother's work. |
"Both write not just about India but about Indian communities in the world. | "Both write not just about India but about Indian communities in the world. |
Profile: Kiran Desai | Profile: Kiran Desai |
"The remarkable thing about Kiran Desai is that she is aware of her Anglo-Indian inheritance - of Naipaul and Narayan and Rushdie - but she does something pioneering. | "The remarkable thing about Kiran Desai is that she is aware of her Anglo-Indian inheritance - of Naipaul and Narayan and Rushdie - but she does something pioneering. |
"She seems to jump on from those traditions and create something which is absolutely of its own. | "She seems to jump on from those traditions and create something which is absolutely of its own. |
"The book is movingly strong in its humanity and I think that in the end is why it won." | "The book is movingly strong in its humanity and I think that in the end is why it won." |
Desai added: "It was seven, almost eight years of work, writing half stories, quarter stories, stories in eighths, of broken people, difficult lives and I picked the novel out of it. | |
"It was quite a difficult, emotional experience for me. I think I was devastated and sad by the end of the book." | |
Sarah Waters had been favourite to win the award. | |
Late surge | |
But on Monday bookmakers reported a surge in people backing Desai. | |
BOOKER SHORTLIST Sarah Waters - The Night WatchKiran Desai - The Inheritance of LossEdward St Aubyn - Mother's MilkKate Greenville - The Secret RiverM J Hyland - Carry Me DownHisham Matar - In the Country of Men | |
The Inheritance of Loss tells the story of a Cambridge-educated Indian judge who lives a reclusive retirement in the foothills of the Himalayas. | The Inheritance of Loss tells the story of a Cambridge-educated Indian judge who lives a reclusive retirement in the foothills of the Himalayas. |
But the arrival of his orphaned teenage granddaughter, and his cook's son's attempts to keep one step ahead of the US immigration department, threatens to shatter his peace. | But the arrival of his orphaned teenage granddaughter, and his cook's son's attempts to keep one step ahead of the US immigration department, threatens to shatter his peace. |
Desai herself lived in India until the age of 15, when she moved to England to continue her education, and currently lives in the US | |
She said she returned to India to write parts of the novel. | |
"I went back to write the Indian bits in India, so it wasn't entirely from a distance." | |
Desai's mother was not at London's Guildhall to hear her daughter scoop the prestigious prize. | |
"I think she was so terrified on my behalf that she retreated as far as she could," said Desai. | |
"She gave me lots of advice and now she is without a phone and without a television in a village in India." |