Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
India

Indian Writer Annie Zaidi Wins USD 100,000 Global Book Prize 'Nine Dots'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 May, 2019 07:31 PM

    Indian writer Annie Zaidi was on Wednesday announced as the 2019 winner of the USD 100,000 Nine Dots Prize, a prestigious book prize created to award innovative thinking that addresses contemporary issues around the world.


    Mumbai-based Annie Zaidi, a freelance writer whose work includes reportage, essays, short stories, poetry and plays, won for her entry 'Bread, Cement, Cactus' - combining memoir and reportage to explore concepts of home and belonging rooted in her experience of contemporary life in India.


    "What really appealed to me about the Nine Dots Prize was the way it encourages entrants to think without borders or restraints. My work has often crossed over genres, traversing between memoir and journalism, and this timely but wide-open question encouraged us to approach it with methods that were equally far-ranging," said the 40-year-old winner.


    Now in its second cycle, the prize challenged entrants to answer the question 'Is there still no place like home?' in a 3,000-word essay.


    The winner of the Nine Dots Prize is supported to develop their response into a full-length book, which is published by Cambridge University Press (CUP), and given the opportunity to spend a term at the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH), Cambridge University.


    "I had been working towards a similarly themed project for a while but didn't have the financial, or even mental, bandwidth to do it justice. The Prize will allow me to dedicate time to the examination of this question, which is of critical importance in the modern world - and it will help fund the necessary research trips, which, as a freelancer, is something I appreciate hugely," said Ms Zaidi, who works on fiction, scripts and columns for magazines and newspapers.


    She has published both fiction and non-fiction, including a collection of essays 'Known Turf: Bantering with Bandits and Other True Tales', which was shortlisted for the Crossword Book Award in 2010, and 'Love Stories # 1 to 14' - a collection of short fiction published in 2012.


    Her new proposed book, based on her Nine Dots Prize winning essay 'Bread, Cement, Cactus', will be published by CUP in May 2020 and will answer the central question through examining how a citizen's sense of 'home' might collapse, or be recovered.


    The varied themes it will address include the politics and economics of death in India, the crossing of caste and religious lines in marriage, and the Partition of India as a great cultural and emotional sundering.


    "In Annie Zaidi we have found a powerful and compelling voice with a unique insight into what home means for citizens of the world today. We are very excited to see how Annie's work will develop over the coming year and hope that it will help further current conversations around the concept of belonging worldwide," said Professor Simon Goldhill, Professor in Greek Literature and Culture and Fellow of King's College, Cambridge University, and Chair of the Nine Dots Prize Board.


    "The anonymous judging process is crucial to the Nine Dots Prize's mission to discover new ways of tackling contemporary issues, whether they come from established thinkers or new voices. The fact that our second winner is so different from our first is testament to the success of this method," he said.


    The inaugural Nine Dots Prize posed the question 'Are digital technologies making politics impossible?' and was won by former Google employee turned Oxford philosopher James Williams.


    The resulting book, 'Stand Out of Our Light: Freedom and Resistance in the Attention Economy', was published in May 2018 to critical acclaim.


    The Nine Dots Prize is judged anonymously and funded by the Kadas Prize Foundation, a UK-registered charity established to fund research into significant but neglected questions relevant to today's world.


    The Prize name name references a lateral thinking puzzle that can only be solved by drawing outside of a box of nine dots arranged in three rows of three.


    The foundation was established by Peter Kadas, who has worked around the world for a number of leading institutions. Originally from Hungary, he holds Canadian and British citizenship and currently lives in Barcelona, Spain.


    Besides Kadas and Prof Goldhill, the Nine Dots Prize Board is comprised of 9 other internationally recognised and distinguished academics, authors, journalists and thinkers.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    You Need Treatment, Come To Pakistan: Shahid Afridi To Gautam Gambhir

    "In Karachi we call guys like him 'saryal' (burnt up). Its simple, I like happy, positive people. Doesn't matter if they are aggressive or competitive, but you have to be positive and Gambhir wasn't," he adds in his book.

    You Need Treatment, Come To Pakistan: Shahid Afridi To Gautam Gambhir

    Indian-Origin ‘Romance Fraudster’ Keyur Vyas Jailed For 6 Yrs For Conning Women In UK

    Keyur Vyas, from east London, was sentenced at Kingston Crown Court on Wednesday, marking the conclusion of a four-year-long investigation by Scotland Yard into his fraudulent activities.

    Indian-Origin ‘Romance Fraudster’ Keyur Vyas Jailed For 6 Yrs For Conning Women In UK

    Neeraj Chopra Undergoes Elbow Surgery, Doubtful For World Championships

    Neeraj Chopra won a gold in the Commonwealth Games as well as Asian Games last year.

    Neeraj Chopra Undergoes Elbow Surgery, Doubtful For World Championships

    ISIS Bride Shamima Begum Will Be Hanged If She Comes To Bangladesh: Foreign Minister

    Minister Abdul Momen said the 19-year-old girl - who fled Bethnal Green for Syria and is currently living in the al-Hol desert refugee camp in Syria - would be punished severely as the country has a "zero tolerance" for terrorism.  

    ISIS Bride Shamima Begum Will Be Hanged If She Comes To Bangladesh: Foreign Minister

    With Lateef Tiger's Elimination, Burhan Wani Brigade Wiped Out

    With Lateef Tiger's Elimination, Burhan Wani Brigade Wiped Out
    Lateef Tiger, a top Hizbul commander and a close associate of the slain separatist poster boy Burhan Wani was among the three militants killed on Friday by the security forces in Jammu and Kashmir's Shopian district, police said.

    With Lateef Tiger's Elimination, Burhan Wani Brigade Wiped Out

    India Linked Masood Azhar To ISIS, Al-Qaeda: Envoy

    "The listing and designation of Masood Azhar as an international terrorist is a big diplomatic win for India," Indian diplomat Gautam Bambawale sadi,  

    India Linked Masood Azhar To ISIS, Al-Qaeda: Envoy