Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
International

Sunjeev Sahota, Indian-Origin Author On Man Booker Fiction Shortlist

IANS, 15 Sep, 2015 12:35 PM
    Indian-origin author Sunjeev Sahota is among the half a dozen authors short-listed for the prestigious 2015 Man Booker Prize for Fiction.
     
    Sahota, who was adjudged the Granta Best Young British Novelist 2013, competes with fellow Briton Tom McCarthy, Jamaican Marlon James, US-based Anne Tyler and Hanya Yanagihara and Nigerian Chigozie Obioma for his second book "The Year of the Runaways" which deals with the experience of illegal immigrants from the Indian subcontinent in Britain.
     
    The six names were announced by chair of the judges, Michael Wood, at a press conference at the offices of sponsor Man Group.
     
    This is the second year that the prize, first awarded in 1969, is open to writers of any nationality, writing originally in English and published in Britain. Previously, the prize was open only to authors from Britain and the Commonwealth, Ireland and Zimbabwe. 
     
    Sahota, a third-generation British-Indian born in 1981, debuted with "Ours Are the Streets" in 2011, about a British Pakistani youth who becomes a suicide bomber.
     
    Three of the six novels are represented by Pan Macmillan India, under its Picador imprint. 
     
    Apart from Sahota's novel, they include James's "A Brief History of Seven Killings", an imagined oral biography told by ghosts, witnesses, killers, members of parliament, drug dealers, conmen, beauty queens, FBI and CIA agents, reporters, journalists, and even Rolling Stones' Keith Richards; as well as Yanagihara's "A Little Life", described as a masterful depiction of heartbreak and a dark and haunting examination of the tyranny of experience and memory.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Dipak Desai, Indian-Origin Doctor Gets Prison In Us For Health Insurance Fraud

    Dipak Desai, Indian-Origin Doctor Gets Prison In Us For Health Insurance Fraud
    An Indian-origin doctor has been sentenced to 71 months in a federal prison and ordered to repay over $2.2 million for health insurance fraud, the Federal Bureau of investigation announced Friday.

    Dipak Desai, Indian-Origin Doctor Gets Prison In Us For Health Insurance Fraud

    India, Turkmenistan Push For Early Completion Of TAPI Pipeline

    India, Turkmenistan Push For Early Completion Of TAPI Pipeline
    India and Turkmenistan on Saturday agreed to push for early implementation of the ambitious TAPI gas pipeline project as Prime Minister Narendra Modi held talks with Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov.

    India, Turkmenistan Push For Early Completion Of TAPI Pipeline

    Sahil Patel, Indian-American Ringleader Of $1.2 Million Tax Phone Scam Gets 15 Years Jail

    Sahil Patel, Indian-American Ringleader Of $1.2 Million Tax Phone Scam Gets 15 Years Jail
    Patel whose scam operation bilked $1.2 million out of US taxpayers, pleaded guilty in January 2015 before US District Judge Alvin Hellerstein, who imposed the sentence Wednesday.

    Sahil Patel, Indian-American Ringleader Of $1.2 Million Tax Phone Scam Gets 15 Years Jail

    Indian-Origin Banquet waiter Sarbir Singh Jailed For Assaulting Two In Singapore

    Indian-Origin Banquet waiter Sarbir Singh Jailed For Assaulting Two In Singapore
    Sarbir Singh, 26, admitted last month to beating a taxi driver at the carpark of the Singapore Flyer at Raffles Avenue, on October 24, 2012

    Indian-Origin Banquet waiter Sarbir Singh Jailed For Assaulting Two In Singapore

    Bangladesh Court Bans Use Of Indian Films Songs As Mobile Ringtones

    Bangladesh Court Bans Use Of Indian Films Songs As Mobile Ringtones
    The High Court directed “abstention” from the use of songs and tunes from Hindi movies, Indian Bangla movies and movies from any other country in the Indian subcontinent as Value Added Services (VAS) of the mobile operators

    Bangladesh Court Bans Use Of Indian Films Songs As Mobile Ringtones

    Modi, Sharif Talk After A Year, Agree To Battle Terror

    Modi, Sharif Talk After A Year, Agree To Battle Terror
    Meeting formally for the first time after a year, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif on Friday agreed to cooperate to eliminate terrorism and expedite the trial of those accused in the 2008 Mumbai massacre.

    Modi, Sharif Talk After A Year, Agree To Battle Terror