HILARY MANTEL WON
SECOND BOOKER
PRIZE
British writer Hilary Mantel has won the prestigious
Booker literary prize for a second time with her blood-soaked Tudor saga “Bring
Up the Bodies,” which the head of the judging panel said had “rewritten the
book” on historical fiction.Mantel, who took the 50,000 pound ($82,000) award
in 2009 for “Wolf Hall,” is the first British author, and the first woman, to
achieve a Booker double.“Bring Up the Bodies” is also the first sequel to win
the prize. It and “Wolf Hall” are parts of a planned trilogy about Thomas
Cromwell, the powerful and ambiguous chief minister to King Henry VIII.“You
wait 20 years for a Booker Prize, and two come along at once,” Mantel said
Tuesday night as she accepted the award at London’s medieval Guildhall. “I
regard this as an act of faith and a vote of confidence.”Alternately thoughtful
and thuggish, trying to keep his head in a treacherous world, Mantel’s Cromwell
has drawn comparisons to the Mafia don at the center of the “Godfather” saga,
and Mantel’s novel combines finely wrought prose with thriller touches.
“You can see as much Don Corleone in this book as D.H.
Lawrence,” said Times Literary Supplement editor Peter Stothard, who chaired
the Booker judging panel.“This is a bloody story,” he said. “But Hilary Mantel
is a writer who thinks through the blood. She uses her art, her power of prose,
to create moral ambiguity.”“Bring Up the Bodies” traces the intertwined fates of
Cromwell and the monarch’s second wife, Anne Boleyn, who fell from favor when
she failed to produce a male heir. Stothard said the new book “utterly
surpassed” the earlier novel, breathing new life into a well-known story.Henry
VIII’s reign has inspired many fictional treatments, from the acclaimed play
and film “A Man for All Seasons” to the soapy TV series “The Tudors.”Stothard
said “Bring Up the Bodies” showed “the greatest modern English prose writer
reviving possibly one of the best-known pieces of English history.”
“This is all well-trodden territory with an inevitable
outcome, and yet she is able to bring it to life as though for the first time,”
he said.“She has rewritten the book on writing historical fiction.”The judging
panel, which included “Downton Abbey” actor Dan Stevens, met for just over two
hours Tuesday to pick its winner.The Booker, established in 1969, usually
brings a huge sales and publicity boost for the winner.Before she won three
years ago, Mantel was a critically praised but commercially lukewarm author of
novels about everything from the French Revolution (“A Place of Greater
Safety”) to the life of a psychic medium (“Beyond Black”). Now, the 60-year-old
author is a best-selling literary sensation. Stothard was delighted Mantel is
now getting her due.“Many writers have put more effort into propelling their
own reputations than Hilary Mantel has,” he said.Mantel joins Peter Carey of
Australia and J.M. Coetzee of South Africa as a two-time winner of the prize,
which is open to writers from Britain, Ireland and the Commonwealth of former
British colonies.
Mantel beat five other shortlisted books to take the
Booker. She had been the bookies’ favorite, although Britain’s Will Self was
also considered a strong contender for the century-spanning stream of
consciousness “Umbrella,” a novel about a woman with encephalitis.Indian poet
Jeet Thayil was nominated for his first novel, “Narcopolis,” set among heroin
addicts in 1970s and 80s Mumbai, and Britain’s Alison Moore for “The
Lighthouse,” about a middle-aged man’s life-changing ferry trip to Germany.The
other finalists were Malaysia’s Tan Twan Eng for “The Garden of Evening Mists,”
which centers on a survivor of a World War II Japanese prison camp; and South
Africa-born Briton Deborah Levy for “Swimming Home,” a portrait of the
devastation wreaked by depression The prize – officially known as the Man
Booker Prize after its sponsor, financial services firm Man Group PLC – always
sparks a flurry of betting, and a blaze of literary debate.Last year’s jury,
which gave the prize to Julian Barnes for “The Sense of an Ending,” was accused
of dumbing down after the chair of the panel said finalists had been chosen for
“readability.”This year’s list was more adventurous. Only Mantel had been a
finalist before, and Self is a relentlessly modernist experimenter, while Tan,
Levy and Moore are all published by small independent publishers.“This was an
extraordinary year for fiction,” Stothard said. But, he added: “The best book
won.”
Prof.
John Kurakar
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