First-time Indian novelist wins UK's Booker Prize
  • http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081014/en_nm/us_booker



    LONDON (Reuters) - Debut Indian novelist Aravind Adiga on Tuesday won
    the Man Booker Prize, one of the world's most prestigious literary
    awards, with "The White Tiger."
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    It was only the third time in the Booker's 40-year history that a
    first-time writer had claimed the award, and, at 33, Adiga was also
    one of its youngest winners.

    He received a cheque for 50,000 pounds ($88,000) at a gala dinner in
    London and can expect not only overnight literary fame but also a
    sharp rise in book sales in the runup to Christmas.

    Booker organizers say last year's winner, Anne Enright, has sold
    around 500,000 copies of "The Gathering," largely due to the prize.
    The White Tiger is published by Atlantic Books.

    The White Tiger follows Balram Halwai, the son of a rickshaw puller
    whose dream of escaping the poverty of his village takes him on a
    journey to the bright lights of Delhi and Bangalore, where he will do
    almost anything to get to the top.

    "It was important for me to present someone from this colossal
    underclass, which is perhaps as big as 400 million, and to do so
    without sentimentality," Adiga told reporters after the awards ceremony.

    "The book has done very well in India. It was a bestseller before this
    was announced. There's been a need for a book like this," he added.

    Michael Portillo, chairman of the five-member judging panel, praised
    The White Tiger for tackling important social and political issues in
    modern-day India.

    "What set this one apart was its originality," Portillo said. "For
    many of us this was entirely new territory -- the dark side of India.

    "It's a book that gains from dealing with very important social issues

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