Two Nigerian authors,
Oyinkan Braithwaite and Diana Evans have made the 2019 Women’s Prize for
Literature shortlist.
News Agency of Nigeria
(NAN) reports that in March, Braithwaite and Evans made the long-list alongside
Akwaeke Emezi who, unfortunately, was not shortlisted.
This is the first time that
two African authors will be shortlisted the same year. Braithwaite was nominated
for her book ‘My Sister, The Serial Killer’ and Evans for ‘Ordinary People’.
Other shortlisted authors
include Pat Barker for ‘The Silence of the Girls’, Anna Burns for ‘Milkman’,
Tayari Jones for ‘An American Marriage’ and Madeline Miller for ‘Circe’.
The prestigious prize has
honoured many great authors since it was launched in 1996, including Chimamanda
Adichie, who won in 2007 for ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’.
NAN reports that it is a
significant career boost and it comes with a £30,000 ($40,000) prize.
It was created after the
Bookers Prize of 1991 where none of the six shortlisted books was by a woman,
despite 60 per cent of novels that year being published by female authors.
Chaired by Prof. Kate
Williams, the 2019 judging panel includes journalists Dolly Alderton and Arifa
Akbar, anti-FGM activist Leyla Hussein.
NAN reports that Sarah Wood
OBE, the chair and co-founder of the global video advertising marketplace,
Unruly was also on the panel.
NAN
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