Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Anne Enright Wins The 2007 Man Booker Prize


Author Anne Enright holds a copy of her book 'The Gathering' during a media event with the six short listed authors for the Mann Booker prize for fiction, in London Tuesday Oct. 16, 2007. Enright won the Man Booker fiction prize Tuesday for "The Gathering," an uncompromising portrait of a troubled family. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

"I bring all of myself to a book," Anne Enright said.

Irish novelist, Anne Enright's "The Gathering" has won her the 2007 Man Booker Prize, the most prestigious literary prize for novels and made her fifty thousand pounds richer Tuesday night.




The choice of the winner is not a surprise to those who have read "The Gathering". But surprising to the so-called "bookies", and the "bettors" , who were voting for Ian McEwan's "On Chesil Beach" and Lloyd Jones's "Mister Pip".

I congratulate the worthy winner who is a seasoned novelist.

Here is the latest interview with Anne Enright

Anne Enright

Anne Enright was born in Dublin in 1962.
She has published a collection of stories, "The Portable Virgin" (Secker and Warburg 1991), which won the Rooney Prize that year.
Her novels are "The Wig My Father Wore", (Jonathan Cape 1995), which was shortlisted for the Irish Times/Aer Lingus Irish Literature Prize; "What Are You Like?" (Jonathan Cape 2000), which won the Royal Society of Authors Encore Prize; "The Pleasure of Eliza Lynch" (Jonathan Cape 2002); and "The Gathering" (Jonathan Cape, 2007)
Uncollected short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review and Granta. She was the inaugural winner of The Davy Byrne Award for her short story "Honey".
Her other work includes a book of essays, "Making Babies: Stumbling into Motherhood" (London, Jonathan Cape, 2004).
She lives in Bray, Co Wicklow.

~ Irish Writers On-Line.




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