Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Two Canadians and previous winner Kiran Desai on the Booker Prize long list

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2025 09:45 AM
  • Two Canadians and previous winner Kiran Desai on the Booker Prize long list

Indian author Kiran Desai, who won the Booker Prize and then didn’t publish a novel for almost two decades, is up for the award again with her long-awaited follow-up.

“The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny,” the 677-page tale of two young Indians making their way in the United States, is one of 13 books announced Tuesday as semifinalists for the prestigious 50,000-pound ($67,000) prize. The contenders include authors from nine countries on four continents.

It’s Desai's first novel since “The Inheritance of Loss,” which won the Booker in 2006.

Two previous finalists are up for the prize again: U.K. writer Andrew Miller, for “The Land in Winter,” and Hungarian-British writer David Szalay, who was born in Canada, for “Flesh.”

Tash Aw, who has been a semifinalist twice before, will be the first Malaysian winner if he takes the prize for “The South.”

Five of the contenders are from Britain: Miller, Szalay, Natasha Brown (“Universality”), Jonathan Buckley (“One Boat”) and Benjamin Wood (“Seascraper”).

Books by U.S. writers in the running include Susan Choi’s “Flashlight,” Katie Kitamura’s “Audition” and Ben Markovits’ “The Rest of Our Lives.”

Also on the list are “Misinterpretation” by Albanian-American Ledia Xhoga, “Love Forms” by Trinidad’s Claire Adam, and “Endling,” a debut novel by Canadian-Ukrainian opera librettist Maria Reva.

“The 13 longlisted novels bring the reader to Hungary, Albania, the north of England, Malaysia, Ukraine, Korea, London, New York, Trinidad and Greece, India and the West Country,” said Irish novelist Roddy Doyle, chair of a five-member judging panel that includes actor Sarah Jessica Parker.

“All, somehow, examine identity, individual or national, and all, I think, are gripping and excellent,” he said.

Founded in 1969, the Booker Prize has a reputation for transforming writers’ careers and is open to novels from any country published in the U.K. and Ireland. Last year’s winner was “Orbital,” by British writer Samantha Harvey.

A list of six finalists will be announced Sept. 23, and this year’s winner will be crowned on Nov. 10 at a ceremony in London.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian recession looms this year if U.S. tariffs stay in place: economists

Canadian recession looms this year if U.S. tariffs stay in place: economists
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said Canada's response will include retaliatory tariffs on $155 billion worth of American goods. That will include tariffs on $30 billion worth of goods immediately and tariffs on the remaining $125 billion worth of American products 21 days later.

Canadian recession looms this year if U.S. tariffs stay in place: economists

U.S. tariffs set to slow pace of homebuilding in Canada: CHBA

U.S. tariffs set to slow pace of homebuilding in Canada: CHBA
Canada's building industry says a trade war with the United States will slow down the pace of home construction. Canadian Home Builders' Association CEO Kevin Lee says the U.S. tariffs levied against Canada today will have a "muted" impact on the industry on their own.

U.S. tariffs set to slow pace of homebuilding in Canada: CHBA

Canada and U.S. stock markets plunge for a second day after trade war launched

Canada and U.S. stock markets plunge for a second day after trade war launched
North American stock markets plunged for a second day as the U.S. imposed broad tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico, triggering a continental trade war. The S&P/TSX composite index was down 547.26 points at 24,454.31, after U.S. President Donald Trump's executive order implementing the tariffs took effect at just after midnight.

Canada and U.S. stock markets plunge for a second day after trade war launched

B.C. Finance Minister Brenda Bailey on track to deliver budget as Trump slaps tariffs

B.C. Finance Minister Brenda Bailey on track to deliver budget as Trump slaps tariffs
One day before delivering her first budget, British Columbia's finance minister said she knows that everyone is wondering how it can be done in the face of unprecedented tariffs from the United States.  It is not time to make "deep cuts," Brenda Bailey told reporters on Monday, but a time to plan for uncertainty and ensure programs and services are protected.

B.C. Finance Minister Brenda Bailey on track to deliver budget as Trump slaps tariffs

U.S. plans to nearly triple anti-dumping duty on Canadian softwood as tariffs loom

U.S. plans to nearly triple anti-dumping duty on Canadian softwood as tariffs loom
British Columbia Premier David Eby says news that the U.S. Department of Commerce wants to almost triple the anti-dumping duties on Canadian softwood lumber is a "massive threat" to the province's forestry sector. The American department issued a preliminary anti-dumping rate of 20.07 per cent, up from 7.66 per cent set three years ago, which is in addition to countervailing duties of 6.74 per cent.

U.S. plans to nearly triple anti-dumping duty on Canadian softwood as tariffs loom

One dead after Langley explosion that may have been caused by drug lab: police

One dead after Langley explosion that may have been caused by drug lab: police
The explosion and fire left two people with critical injuries and one person unaccounted for as the flames destroyed the home, spread to nearby residences and forced the closure of the neighbourhood. Sgt. Zynal Sharoom says in a news release that investigators remained at the scene over the weekend and were working with the BC Coroners Service to identify the remains.

One dead after Langley explosion that may have been caused by drug lab: police