Showing posts with label Shortlist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shortlist. Show all posts

Monday, May 28, 2018

The Commonwealth Short Story Prize Shortlist

Twenty-four outstanding stories have been selected by an international judging panel from 5182 entries from 48 Commonwealth countries. The writers come from 14 countries including, for the first time, Samoa and Ghana.

The Commonwealth Short Story Prize is awarded for the best piece of unpublished short fiction in English from the Commonwealth. As well as being open to entries translated into English from any language, it is the only literary prize in the world where entries can be submitted in Bengali, Chinese, Malay, Portuguese, Samoan, Swahili, and Tamil. Again, in 2018, we’re delighted that a translated story has reached the shortlist. The inclusion of other languages in the Prize speaks to Commonwealth Writers’ recognition of the need for linguistic diversity to promote the richness of varied literary traditions and lesser-heard narratives.

The 24 entries have earned their place on the shortlist - a rich collection of stori es showcasing the skill and talent of the writers and capturing the attention of the judges. Chair of the judges, award-winning novelist and short story writer Sarah Hall, said of this year’s shortlist:

The versatility and power of the short story is abundantly clear in this shortlist. With such a range of subject, style, language and imagination, it is clear what a culturally important and relevant form it is, facilitating many different creative approaches, many voices and versions of life. 

With a panel of judges also spanning the globe there was a sense of depth and breadth to the selection process, and each commonwealth region showcases the very best of its traditions, adaptations, and contemporary approaches. 

This is such a great, unique prize, one that seeks to uphold both literary community and particularity, crossing borders with the ambition of collating our common and unique stories. It is an enormous pleasure, and illuminating, to have been part of the reading process. 

The Prize is judged by an international panel of writers, representing each of the five regions of the Commonwealth. The 2018 judges are Damon Galgut (Africa), Sunila Galappatti (Asia), Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm (Canada and Europe) Mark McWatt(Caribbean) and Paula Morris (Pacific).

The 2018 Commonwealth Short Story Prize Shortlist in full:
  • ‘Dancing with Ma’, Harriet Anena (Uganda)
  • ‘Matalasi’, Jenny Bennett-Tuionetoa (Samoa)
  • ‘An Elephant in Kingston’, Marcus Bird (Jamaica)
  • ‘Tahiti’, Brendan Bowles (Canada)
  • ‘Ghillie’s Mum’, Lynda Clark (United Kingdom)
  • ‘Goat’, Sally Craythorne (United Kingdom)
  • ‘The Divine Pregnancy in a Twelve-Year-Old Woman’, Sagnik Datta (India)
  • ‘Soundtracker’, Christopher Evans (Canada)
  • ‘Passage’, Kevin Hosein (Trinidad and Tobago)
  • ‘Jyamitik Zadukor’ (The Geometric Wizard) by Imran Khan (Bangladesh) translated by Arunava Sinha
  • ‘Talk of The Town’, Fred Khumalo (South Africa)
  • ‘Night Fishing’, Karen Kwek (Singapore)
  • ‘Nobody’s Wife’, Chris Mansell (Australia)
  • ‘The Boss’, Breanne Mc Ivor (Trinidad and Tobago)
  • ‘Holding On, Letting Go’, Sandra Norsen (Australia)
  • ‘Empathy,’ Cheryl Ntumy (Ghana)
  • ‘A Girl Called Wednesday’, Kritika Pandey (India)
  • ‘Chicken Boy’, Lynne Robertson (New Zealand)
  • ‘Hitler Hates You’, Michelle Sacks (South Africa)
  • ‘After the Fall’, James Smart (United Kingdom)
  • ‘Son Son’s Birthday’, Sharma Taylor (Jamaica)
  • ‘Berlin Lends a Hand’, Jonathan Tel (United Kingdom)
  • ‘True Happiness’, Efua Traoré (Nigeria)
  • ‘Juju’, Obi Umeozor (Nigeria)

Thursday, May 01, 2014

Commonwealth Short Story Prize 2014 Shortlist

The Commonwealth Short Story Prize announced its 2014 shortlist on April 30 for the different geographic areas: Africa, Asia, Canada and Europe, Caribbean and Pacific.

Africa
  • Ikanre by Adelehin Ijasan (Nigeria)
  • All Them Savages by Michelle Sacks (South Africa)
  • Let’s Tell This Story Properly by Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi (Uganda)

Asia
  • Grandmother by Yu-Mei Balasingamchow (Singapore)
  • A Day in the Death by Sara Adam Ang (Singapore)

Canada and Europe
  • The Night of Broken Glass by Jack Wang (Canada)
  • On The Other Side by Idrissa Simmonds (Canada)
  • Agnes Agnes Agnes by Luiza Sauma (United Kingdom)
  • Household Gods by Tracy Fells (United Kingdom)
  • Killing Time by Lucy Caldwell (United Kingdom)

Caribbean
  • Cowboy by Helen Klonaris (Bahamas)
  • Sending for Chantal by Maggie Harris (Guyana)
  • Miss Annie Cooks Fish by Charmaine Rousseau (Trinidad and Tobago)

Pacific
  • The Dog and the Sea by Lucy Treloar (Australia)
  • Monkey Boy by Janine Mikosza (Australia)
  • Hummingbird by Daniel Anders (Australia)
  • Playing the Stringless Guitar by Michael Hunt (Australia)
  • Tenure by Julian Novitz (New Zealand)
  • Rhododendrons in Mist by David Kerkt (New Zealand)
Read more about the shortlisted authors here

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Caine Prize 2014 Shortlist

Exactly a week ago, the Caine Prize announced its 2014 shortlist. This year's shortlist was announced by the Nobel Prize winner and Patron of the Caine Prize Wole Soyinka, as part of the opening ceremonies for the UNESCO World Book Capital 2014 celebration in Port Harcourt, Nigeria. The Shortlist comprises:
  1. Diane Awerbuck (South Africa) "Phosphorescence" in Cabin Fever (Umuzi, Cape Town. 2011)
  2. Efemia Chela (Ghana/Zambia) "Chicken" in Feast, Famine and Potluck (Short Story Day Africa, South Africa. 2013)
  3. Tendai Huchu (Zimbabwe) "The Intervention" in Open Road Review, issue 7, New Delhi. 2013
  4. Billy Kahora (Kenya) "The Gorilla's Apprentice" in Granta (London. 2010)
  5. Okwiri Oduor (Kenya) "My Father's Head" in Feast, Famine and Potluck (Short Story Day Africa, South Africa. 2013)
Tendai Huchu is the author of The Hairdresser of Harare. Billy Kahora's Urban Zoning was nominated in 2012 Caine Prize Shortlist. To commemorate fifteen years of the Caine Prize this year, £500 will be awarded to each shortlisted writer. The winner of the £10,000 prize will be announced at a celebratory dinner at the Bodleian Library, Oxford on Monday 14 July.

Friday, November 01, 2013

Golden Baobab Prizes Announces 2013 Shortlist

Accra, Ghana November 1, 2013: 180 stories were submitted to this year's Golden Baobab Prizes. Of these, 25 made it onto the longlist and 8 to the shortlist. The 8 shortlisted stories are:

The Golden Baobab Prize for Picture Books
  1. The Princess with a Golden Voice by Philip Begho (Nigeria)
  2. The Little Hippo by Liza Esterhuyse (South Africa)
  3. The Grandma Mimo's Breakfast by Carol Gachiengo (Kenya)
The Golden Baobab Prize for Early Chapter Books
  1. Seven by Sabina Mutangadura (Zimbabwe)
  2. Rhino by Richard Street (South Africa)
  3. What's going on at 179 Jabulani Street? by Karen Hurt (South Africa)
The Golden Baobab Prize for Rising Writers
  1. The Little Secret by Fego Martins Ahia (Nigeria)
  2. Pieces of Africa by Kanengo Rebecca Diallo (Tanzania)

According to the Chair of Judges for the Picture Book Prize, Zetta Elliott, whose first book, Bird, won the Honor Award in Lee and Low Books' New Voices Contest, 
I am very impressed with the range and originality of the stories. This year's shortlist suggests that there are plenty of emerging authors who take seriously the task of nourishing the imagination of African children. These stories have magic, mystery, and important lessons about the value of community. They confirm what we already know. Africa's literary landscape is rich and diverse.
The Golden Baobab Prizes, now in its fifth year, were set up to find the very best writers of African children's literature. This year's shortlist suggests that the judges; Benardine Evaristo, Esi Sutherland-Addy, Nonikiwe Mashologu, Zetta Elliott, Annette Hansen and Osayimwense Osa, all have varying ideas about what constitutes good fiction for children. This has ensured a very diverse 2013 shortlist. 

Osayinwense Osa, founding author of the Journal of African Children's and Youth Literature (JACYL), is a firm believer in the power of literature. He says, 
Its ability to transform the world from confusion and violence to peace is immense and so it is wise to get children reading in their formative years. They must ave access to literuature which is in touch with social functions, individuals lives, and world realities and some of the stories in the shortlist do just that.
The shortlist comes out after over 8 weeks of rigorous Golden Baobab Prizes evaluation process. It is evident that African writers are passionate about creating beautiful stories to ignite the imaginations of African children everywhere. The winners of the 2013 prizes will be announced on November 13.
___________________________
About the Golden Baobab Prizes
The Golden Baobab Prizes for literature was established in July 2008 to inspire the creation of enthralling African children's stories by gifted African writers. The Prizes invite entries of unpublished stories written by African citizens irrespective of age, race, or country of origin. The Prizes are organized by Golden Baobab, a Ghana-based pan African social enterprise dedicated to supporting African writers and illustrators to create winning African children's books. The organization's Advisory Board includes renowned authors Ama Ata Aidoo, Patrice Nganang, Jay Heale and Maya Ajmera. Golden Baobab is proudly supported by Echoing Green, Reach for Change, The Global Fund for Children and The African Library Project.

For further information, photos or to arrange interviews, please contact: Nanama B. Acheampong via info@goldenbaobab.org
Tel: +233302 265215

Saturday, October 05, 2013

Man Booker Prize Shortlist

Actually I am late in posting this as the Booker Prize winner will be announced  in two weeks time on October 15, 2013. It hovered on the peripheral of my mind but I never came around to posting it. As already known Zimbabwean writer NoViolet Bulawayo made the list with her book We Need New Names. Here are the six-shortlisted books:
  • Wee Need New Names by NoViolet Bulawayo
  • The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton
  • The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
  • A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
  • The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin
  • Harvest by Jim Crace
According to the Booker Prize site: The six books on the list could not be more diverse. There are entries from novelists from New Zealand, England, Canada and Zimbabwe - each with its own highly distinctive taste. They range in size from the 832 pages of Eleanor Catton's The Luminaries to the 104 page The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin. The times represented stretch from the biblical Middle East (Toibin) to contemporary Zimbabwe (NoViolet Bulawayo) by way of 19th-Century modern Tokyo (Ruth Ozeki). The oldest author on the list, Jim Crace, is 67, the youngest (indeed the youngest ever shortlistee), Eleanor Catton, is 28. Colm Toibin has written more than 15 books, The Luminaries is only Catton's second and We Need New Names is Bulawayo's first.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Kwani? Manuscript Prize Announces Shortlist

The Kwani? Manuscript Project, a new one-off literary prize for unpublished fiction from African writers, is delighted to announce a shortlist selected from a longlist of 30. The seven shortlisted titles are:

  1. Ayobami Adebayo, Stay with Me (Nigeria) 
  2. Ayesha Harruna Attah, Saturday’s People (Ghana / US)
  3. Stanley Gazemba, Ghettoboy (Kenya)
  4. Toni Kan, The Carnivorous City (Nigeria) 
  5. Timothy Kiprop Kimutai, The Water Spirits (Kenya) 
  6. Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, The Kintu Saga (Uganda / UK)
  7. Saah Millimono, One Day I Will Write About This War (Liberia)

The shortlist has been selected, without the author’s name attached, by a high-profile panel of judges including Deputy Editor of Granta magazine Ellah Wakatama Allfrey, leading scholar of African literature Professor Simon Gikandi, Chairman of Kenyatta University’s Literature Department Dr. Mbugua wa Mungai, editor of Zimbabwe’s Weaver Press Irene Staunton and internationally renowned Nigerian writer Helon Habila.  The Chair of Judges, award-winning Sudanese novelist Jamal Mahjoub, said:  
The five judges of the Kwani? Manuscript prize 2013 have carefully worked through a longlist of 30. These showed a wide range of styles, subjects and regional concerns. The judges were primarily looking for works that show promise in terms of the writing itself as well as the breadth and depth of vision brought to bear by the authors. The final shortlist of seven entries reflects the overall consensus of the judges and summarises their individual interests.
These seven novels from five African countries take us through the underbelly of Lagos, class divisions in Nairobi and war-torn Monrovia, through families cursed, self-destructing and reuniting, bringing new scrutiny to the epic, dictatorship and points-of-view in stories that are brave, tender and beguiling.

Kwani Trust’s Managing Editor, Billy Kahora said, 
In reviewing the shortlisted stories, I’m blown away by the potential these manuscripts hold, the different styles, concerns and voices that they bring to new contemporary African literature, and further add to Kwani’s fiction list. We can’t wait to bring them out as novels in the region and partner with publishing houses across the continent to make them available across Africa.

The top three manuscripts will be announced on Monday 1 July 2013 and will be awarded cash prizes totaling Ksh 525,000 (c. $6000).

In addition, Kwani Trust plans to publish 3-5 of the shortlisted manuscripts by April 2014. The Trust will also be partnering with regional and global agents and publishing houses to secure high profile international co-publication opportunities.

The Authors and Synopsis of the Stories

Ayobami Adebayo, Stay with Me  
Ayobami Adebayo was born in 1988 and her short stories have appeared in Farafina Magazine, Saraba Magazine, East Jasmine Review and African Writing Online.  Her work was highly commended in the 2009 Commonwealth short story competition. In 2012, she was a writer in residence at Writers Omi International (Ledig House), New York. She is the fiction editor for Saraba magazine.

Synopsis: Yejide's marriage is almost perfect. Even though she has never been pregnant, she is sure that her husband loves her and nothing can come between them. Then he marries another wife and everything Yejide has believed begins to fall apart. Still, she is not ready to lose the man she loves. Her quest to get pregnant before the new wife tests the limits of love and loss as she searches for a miracle baby on mountain tops, at stream sides and in her brother-in-law's bed.

Ayesha Harruna Attah, Saturday’s People 
Ayesha Harruna Attah is the author of the novel Harmattan Rain, which was shortlisted for the 2010 Commonwealth Writers' Prize, Best First Book. She has had short stories published in the African Roar 2010 anthology, Imagine Africa, and the Caine Prize Writers' 2009 anthology. She received an MFA in Fiction from NYU’s Creative Writing Program in May 2011.

Synopsis: Saturday’s People is based in a West African country at the end of a 17-year military dictatorship. It weaves the stories of four members of the Avoka household, where everybody is lurching toward self-destruction. The father, Theo, is recruited to write the memoirs of the dictator-turned-president whom he loathes. Zahra, matriarch of the house, rekindles an affair with an old lover and barely keeps her family and sanity together. Theo and Zahra's son Kojo has just started the boarding school of his dreams but finds out it's nothing like he imagined. Their new help, Atsu, recently transplanted from the village, struggles to understand the eccentricities of her new family.

Stanley Gazemba, Ghettoboy
Stanley Gazemba was born in 1974 in Western Kenya. He has published 2 novels, The Stone Hills of Maragoli (a recipient of the Jomo Kenyatta Prize and re-issued by Kwani Trust in 2009) and Khama. He has also published 7 children’s books: Shaka Zulu-Warrior King; Poko and the Jet; Poko at the Koras; The Herds boy and the Princess; Tobi and the Street boy; Ant’s Clay castle and Grandmother’s Winning Smile (long-listed for the Macmillan Prize). He has written for Msanii magazine, Sunday Nation, The New York Times, Saturday Nation and The East African. He was International Fellow at the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference in 2007. 

Synopsis: Ghettoboy explores relationships across and between urban spaces and social class within Nairobi.  When Kimani gets a job with the Adamali family, a rich Asian household, he believes that his dream of escaping the harsh life of the ghetto has come true.  But the job is unusual one.  He is to be the day-nurse of a bedridden matriarch who is in possession of a secret formula that can alter the global construction business if put into practice.  Ghosts from Idi Amin’s Uganda and Kimani’s relationship with Adamali’s daughter begin to threaten planned and expected trajectories for all concerned. 

Toni Kan, The Carnivorous City
Toni Kan is the author of the poetry collection When a Dream Lingers too Long, the novella Ballad of Rage, and most recently the short story collection Nights of the Creaking Bed (Cassava Republic). He is one of Nigeria's most anthologised poets and short story writers, and his work has appeared in Salthill, Drum Voices, Revue, Farafina, Sentinel Poetry Quarterly and ANA Review.  He currently edits the ‘Sunday Sun Revue’, a weekly 4 page literary supplement in Sunday Sun.  

Synopsis: Carnivorous City is a novel about Lagos, the city which is at once a beast with bared fangs and a seductive mistress with wild charms.  A young man arrives in the city in search of his missing brother who may or may not be dead. His search becomes, in many ways, a journey through the murky underbelly of Lagos as well as an odyssey into his own interior landscape; an odyssey that leaves him questioning long held beliefs and certitudes. 

Timothy Kiprop Kimutai, The Water Spirits
Timothy Kiprop Kimutai is 27 years old and interested in finding an audience for his stories. He participates in creative writing workshops with Amka Space, a writing forum provided by the Goethe Institute in Nairobi. 

Synopsis: Kogi sees an alternate world when his mother points a knife at her chest ready to plunge it in.   He finds a girl lying unconscious by the river, carries her home and lets her live in their chicken house - all the while thinking that she is a water spirit.  He dreams of bringing back rare chicken breeds from the brink of extinction.  The Water Spirits places the mysterious alongside the quotidian, exploring Kogi’s relationships with the water spirit, his newly-widowed mother Susanna and sister Chebet, and the pains of feeling powerless.

Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, The Kintu Saga
Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi is currently completing a PhD in Creative Writing at Lancaster University.  Her work has been published by African Writing Online and Commonword. She also runs the African reading group, ARG!, in Manchester which focuses on obscure African writers.

Synopsis: At dawn, on Monday the 5th of January 2004 in Uganda, the curse of Kintu strikes. Kamu Kintu is brutally murdered by a mob in Bwaise. Three months later, ten men involved in his murder are found dead, their bodies strewn along Bwaise’s main street. The story then travels back to 1750, to the beginning of the curse in the old kingdom of Buganda.  The Kintu Saga follows the misfortunes of the Kintu clan over 250 years, blending Ganda oral tradition, forms of myth, folktale and history with biblical elements.  The novel explores ideas of transgression, curse and perpetuity, looking back at the history of Buganda Kingdom and tracing birth of modern Uganda. 

Saah Millimono, One Day I Will Write About This War
Saah Millimono was born in 1981 and is a graduate of St. Michael’s Catholic High School in Monrovia, Liberia.  He works as a freelance fiction writer for the Liberian Observer Corporation and in 2009 won the Short Fiction Prize of the Sea Breeze Journal of Contemporary Liberian Writings.

Synopsis: Tarnue and Kou are from different backgrounds, young, ambitious, and in primary school. Suddenly the Liberian Civil War erupts; they and many others are altered in ways they could hardly have thought of.  One Day I Will Write About This War tenderly explores this unlikely childhood friendship and multiple human costs of war.

For more information please visit Kwani?'s website.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Nigeria Dominates the 14th Caine Prize Shortlist - 2013

This year's Caine Prize for African Writing shortilst, released on May 15, was dominated by Nigerians. This emphaises Nigeria's long-held and enviable position as the powerhouse of quality and prodigious Literature on the continent; perhaps only South Africa can 'compete'. Four of the five stories that made up this year's shortlist were by Nigerians. The fifth story is by a Sierra Leonean. Nigeria has produced such great writers as the Nobel Laureate, Akinwande Oluwole (Wole) Soyinka; the Man Booker International Prize Winner, Chinua Achebe; Elechi Amadi; John Pepper Clark; Ola Rotimi; and others. One can also mention many of the new generation of writers such as Chuma Nwokolo; the Booker Prize Winner, Ben Okri; the Orange Prize Winner, Chimamanda Adichie; and others. We can talk of Nigerian writers forever. According to the Chair of Judges, Gus Casely-Hayford,
The Shortlist was selected from 96 entries from 16 African countries. They are all outstanding African stories that were drawn from an extraordinary body of high quality submissions.
Could Nigeria's dominance with quality literature have been due to the vibrant publishing industry in the country? Yet, it is also clear from the shortlist (below) that only one of the stories was published in Nigeria. One can therefore say that writing is embedded in the DNA of the Nigerian. The average Nigerian command over the English language and their diction is unique.

Another unique phenomenon, keeping up with the last year's, is the subject. Prior to 2012, the Caine Prize became notorious for award certain peculiar stories. Stories of extreme hunger, poverty, unconditional scatology, which represents nothing but base, and other stories in similar vein. Last year the Chair of Judges, Bernadine Evaristo, sought to go 'beyond the more stereotypical narrative.' The 2013 CoJ, Gus Casely-Hayford, might have kept faith with going beyond the stereotypical. In describing the 2013 shortlist, he says
The five contrasting titles interrogate aspects of things that we might feel we know of Africa - violence, religion, corruption, family, community - but these are subjects that are deconstructed and beautifully remade. These are challenging, arresting, provocative stories of a continent and its descendants captured at a time of burgeoning change.
I hope they provide an alternative to the common narrative; I hope they do not revert to the previous and that even when they discuss such issues they would be more penetrative, investigative, or psychological treatment than mere arrangement of images.

This year's shortlisted stories are:
  • Elnathan John (Nigeria) Bayan Layi from Per Contra Issue 25 (USA, 2012)
  • Tope Folarin (Nigeria) Miracle from Transition, Issue 109 (Bloomington, 2012)
  • Pede Hollist (Sierra Leone) Foreign Aid from Journal of Progressive Human Services, Vol. 23.3 (Philadelphia, 2012)
  • Abubakar Adam Ibrahim (Nigeria) The Whispering trees from The Whispering Trees, published by Parresia Publishers (Lagos, 2012)
  • Chinelo Okparanta (Nigeria) America from Granta, Issue 118 (London, 2012)
The Winner of this £10,000 prize will be announced on July 8, 2013 at Bodleian Library, Oxford. Read more here.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Man Booker 2012 Shortlist Announced

The Man Booker Prize shortlist for this year has been announced (today, September 11, 2012). The shortlisted books were selected from a longlist of 12 books. The following are books selected by the judges chaired by Sir Peter Stothard:
  1. Tan Twan Eng, The Garden of Evening Mists (Myrmidon Books)
  2. Deborah Levy, Swimming Home (And Other Stories/Faber & Faber)
  3. Hilary Mantel, Bring Up the Bodies (Fourth Estate)
  4. Alison Moore, The Light House (Salt)
  5. Will Self, Umbrella (Bloomsbury)
  6. Jeet Thayil, Nacropolis (Faber & Faber)
According to Peter Stothard
After re-reading an extraordinary longlist of twelve, it was the pure power of prose that settled most debates. We loved the shock of language shown in so many different ways and were exhilarated by the vigour and vividly defined values in the six books that we chose - and in the visible confidence of the novel's place in forming our words and ideas.
Trivias
The shortlist includes two debut novels (Alison Moore's The Light House and Jeet Thayil's Nacropolis); three small independent publishers (Myrmidon Books and Salt); two former shortlisted authors and one previous winner (Hilary Mantel with Wolf Hall). There are three men and three women authors; four British, one Malaysian and one Indian.

The winner of the 2012 Prize will be announced at a dinner at London's Guildhall on Tuesday October 16, 20112. Each of the shortlisted writers is awarded with 2,500 Pounds and a specially commissioned beautifully handbound edition of his/her book. The winner receives 50,000 Pounds.

Thursday, September 06, 2012

Shortlist of 10 for the Nigeria Prize (NLNG) for Literature 2012

The Advisory Board for The Nigeria Prize for Literature led by Professor Emeritus Ayo Banjo has announced an initial shortlist of 10 books in the running for the 2012 literature prize. According to the Chair of Judges, Prof. Francis Abiola Irele, it took months of intensive scrutiny by the panel to produce the shortlist drawn from 214 entries from Nigerians at home and abroad; this happens to be the largest number received since the prize was inaugurated in 2004. The following are the shortlisted books:
  1. Ngozi Achebe OnaedoThe Blacksmith's Daughter
  2. Ifeanyi Ajaegbo: Sarah House
  3. Jude Dibia: Blackbird
  4. Vincent Egbuson: Zhero
  5. Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani: I do not Come to You by Chance
  6. Onuora Nzekwu: Troubled Dust
  7. Olusola Olugbesan: Only Canvas
  8. Lola Shoneyin: The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives
  9. E E Sule: Sterile Sky
  10. Chika Unigwe: On Black Sister's Street
The Advisory Board announced that the final shortlist will be released soon. The Nigeria Prize for Literature rotates yearly amongst four literary genres: prose fiction, poetry, drama and children's literature. Last year it was won by Mai Nasara (a pseudonym) for Missing Clock (children's literature). The award comes with a cash prize of US$ 100,000.

From all indications, this year's award is going to be keenly competed. Most of the books have received some form of awards and have been hugely patronised and well-reviewed/received. From Chika Unigwei's On Black Sister's Street, through to Lola Shoneyin's The Secret Lives of Baba Segi's Wives, Adaobi's I do not Come to You by Chance, Jude Dibia's Blackbird, and Ngozi Achebe's The Blacksmith's Daughter, the judges are going to find a hard time shortening the list further down and then choosing the winner.

Tuesday, September 04, 2012

Shortlist for the 2012 Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature in Africa

The Lumina Foundation has announced the shortlist of the Wole Soyinka Prize 2012 for Literature in Africa. The longlist of 15 books have been whittled down to 3, with the winner to be announced on September 8, 2012 at the Civic Center, Ozumba Mbadiwe in Nigeria. The shortlisted books are:
  1. The Unseen Leopard by Bridget Pitt (South Africa)
  2. Roses and Bullets by Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo (Nigeria)
  3. Young Blood by Sifiso Mzobe
Read more about the award here.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

177. SHORT STORY: Love on Trial by S. O. Kenani

Love on Trial is the last of the Caine Prize Short I am reviewing. The story was published in the For Honour and other stories anthology by the author. Love on Trial extracts from a real incident that took place in Malawi. It is about the arrest and sentencing of two Malawian homosexuals to fourteen years in prison; an incident that got the whole world shouting and cutting aid to the country which led to their pardon. 

In this story, Charles is a third year law school at the university. He has been stumbled upon by the village drunk, Mr Kanchingwe, when he was having an affair with his lover in a school lavatory. Charles was seen and had to face the villagers whilst his lover bolted not to be seen or heard of in the story again. Mr Kanchigwe has become something of a cult-hero for having stumbled upon the two and so, for a tot of the local gin, Kanchigwe will give some details of what he saw. For, the details more tots have to be provided for him and his growing crowd of friends. The author explored society's reactions to what is normally described as 'evil' and 'foreign'. Charles hardly had any sympathisers as most saw his actions as ungodly, though none question the numerous corruption, bestiality - as someone was quoted to have slept with a goat - and other evils that go on in the country.

In an interview with the MBC, the nation's broadcasting corporation, Charles was outspoken and argued with the host, showing maturity in thought and in observation. It was there that he refuted the argument that he had become homosexual because he had at a point in his life come into contact with a westerner; to him, he was born with it and that was his natural orientation. Whereas the host quoted the bible to speak against him, Charles also quoted the story of David and Jonathan to support his sexual orientation. He gained some support after this interview, though his enemies were immeasurable. This argument sought of put the writer  on a higher pedestal, pointing accusing fingers at everybody, telling them they are hypocrites and that they either be with the accused or suffer, which was the direct import of the fable at the end of the story. The argument in the dialogue between Khama, the interviewer, and Charles was dogmatic and trite. It was ineffective in carrying out what it was meant to do and will do more harm than good. For instance, in presuming that everybody in the society was evil, he implicitly quoted  evil to support his quest making it seem, in the text, as if homosexuality is evil. A quick glance at the characters showed how Kenani put them below Charles: the villagers were in torn shorts, the adults were mostly drunkards, the pastors were sleeping with their flock, some of the villagers were sleeping with animals, etc.

Whereas a story like this plagues most countries on the continent and therefore unique with few authors like Tendai Huchu writing about homosexuality in his novel The Hairdresser of Harare, Kenani's prose is too journalistic and jarred at certain points. The author depended too much on the real story instead of using it as a canvass to paint his, taking away the plot and tension that could have been part of such a story. For instance, what happens if the main character isn't a Law student and therefore capable of quoting and refuting? What happens if he is an illiterate in the village? Again, we are told that Charles, the most brilliant student in his class - have been approached by several female lovers - an issue that usually comes up in such discussions; but including the daughter of the President? I think stretching and overstretching sometimes make stories difficult to take in. During Charles's interview he relied mostly upon the text-book western-natural dichotomous argument that plagues any discussion of homosexuality.

So great was the effect of what happened on the story that the author went further to describe breakdown in the economy due to aid-cut and how the country struggled and almost became bankrupt due to the sentencing of Charles. In fact, Kenani suddenly made Kanchigwe got infected with HIV so that the cut in aid (in cash and in kind) meant no provision of retro-viral drugs and hence a decline in his health and possible death. This part of the story was not necessary as part of Love on Trial. For instance, donors can threaten to cut aid on any issue not only on a breach of human rights. They could and have chosen to do so even if governments refuse to do something of great importance to their countries that is against the interest of the donors. As much as every individual's right has to be respected, so must countries be left to decide on whatever they want to do and not be coerced by aid-cuts. This threat of aid-cut has cajoled countries on the continent to act in line with donor-countries' prescriptions.

Following the death of Bingu wa Mutharika and the assumption of power by his vice Joyce Banda, the rights of gays and lesbians - in general LGBTs- has been almost granted as she has pledged to repeal the law and donor aid has started to flow. The issue is, would Banda surrender to donors on every issue when aid is threatened? And would Kenani write in support of a threat of aid-cut by a foreign government that wants to purchase a mining-company the country owns, assuming Malawi has one?

The story itself, not the theme, is plain and had it not being a short story would have been boring to read. It was predictable at several places; for instance, I predicted and was shocked though when Kanchigwe became a victim of a story he helped popularised. That should this be chosen as an exemplar writing - prose-wise - of African writing? No. It is what others have referred to as polemic and this does not necessarily make it a stellar prose. Though I wish it doesn't win to avoid other writers thinking that writing on mere polemics translates into stellar writing, Kenani has written a story on a theme that few has written about but which everything points to its eventual crowding. Kenani as a writer seems - as two (those I've read) out of many (those he has possibly written) is not enough grounds to make a sure judgement - to hover around stories of love as shown in his story Happy Ending which was included in the Caine Prize Anthology A Life in Full and other stories.
_________
About the author: Read about the author here. Read the story here. For a deeper analyses of this story visit here. The author share most of my views.

Friday, May 04, 2012

Caine Prize for African Writing Shortlist

The shortlist for the thirteenth Caine Prize for African Writing was released on May 1st, 2012. The shortlist was announced by the new vice-president of the prize Ben Okri. The Chair of judges, author and Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature Bernardine Evaristo MBE, has described the shortlist as 'truly diverse fiction from a truly diverse continent.'

The 2012 shortlist comprises:
  • Rotimi Babatunde (Nigeria): Bombay's Republic from Mirabilia Review Vol. 3.9 (Lagos, 2011)
  • Billy Kahora (Kenya): Urban Zoning from McSweeney's Vol. 37 (San Francisco, 2011)
  • Stanley Kenani (Malawi): Love on Trial from For honour and Other Stories published by eKhaya/Random House Struik (Cape Town, 2011)
  • Melissa Tandiwe Myambo (Zimbabwe): La Salle de Départ from Patrick of the Spindle Vol. 4.2 (New Orleans, June, 2010)
  • Constance Myburgh (South Africa): Hunter Emmanuel from Jungle Jim Issue 6 (Cape Town, 2011)
Selected from 122 entries from 14 African countries Bernardine Evaristo said:
I'm proud to announce that this shortlist shows the range of African fiction beyond the more stereotypical narratives. These stories have an originality and facility with language that made them stand out. We've chosen a bravely provocative homosexual story set in Malawi; a Nigerian soldier fighting in the Burma Campaign of WW2; a hardboiled noir tale involving a disembodied leg; a drunk young Kenyan who outwits his irate employers; and the tension between Senegalese siblings over migration and family responsibility.
The winner of the 10,000 Pounds prize is to be announced at the celebratory dinner at the Bodleian Library, Oxford on Monday 2 July. Read more about the announcement here.

For those interested let's read this and make our own guesses of the winner. If Evaristo's words and the descriptions provided are anything to go by, this year's winner will be far different from the previous three or four where some readers have criticised the prize for awarding stereotypes. I will be reading and reviewing or talking about these before the July 2 date.

Thursday, September 08, 2011

Shortlists: Booker Prize and NLNG

The Man Booker Prize for Fiction 2011 shortlist was announced on Tuesday September 6, 2011. From a longlist of 13 books comes a shortlist of 6.
  • Jualian Barnes The Sense of Ending (Jonathan Cape)
  • Carol Birch Jamrach's Menagerie (Canongate)
  • Patrick deWitt The Sisters Brothers (Granta Books)
  • Esi Edugyan Half Blood Blues (Serpent's Tail)
  • Stephen Kelman Pigeon English (Bloomsbury)
  • A.D. Miller Snowdrops (Atlantic Books)
This list contains 2 first time novelists: Stephen Kelman and A.D. Miller and two have had success with the prize in the past: Julian Barnes and Carol Birch. Four of the books are from independent publishers, two are Canadian writers and four are British.

ImageNations interest is in Esi Edugyan who, though a Canadian, was born to Ghanaian emigrants. Then there is also the Ghanaian connection, in terms of the protagonist, in Kelman's Pigeon English. My friend Geosi has suggested that after reading all the reviews, he tips Esi to win. I have not yet read any of the reviews. I wish Esi all the best.

The winner will be announced on October 18, 2011 at London's Guildhall, with the winner receiving 50,000 Pounds. Shortlisted authors would also receive some monetary prizes as well. Read more here.
______________________________
The shortened shortlist of NLNG Prize for Literature has been announced. The previous shortlist of 6 stories has been whittled down to 3:
The winner will be announced on October 10, 2011 at a world press conference at Eko Hotel in Lagos. We wish all the shortlisted authors the best of luck.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

12th Caine Prize Shortlist

I know this has been long in coming... The shortlist for the 2011 Caine Prize for African Writing was been announced on Monday 9 May. The Caine Prize, widely known as the ‘African Booker’ and regarded as Africa’s leading literary award, is now in its twelfth year. The chair of judges, the award-winning Libyan novelist Hisham Matar, said 
choosing a shortlist out of nearly 130 entries was not an easy task – one made more difficult and yet more enjoyable by the varied tastes of the judges – but we have arrived at a list of five stories that excel in quality and ambition. Together they represent a portrait of today’s African short story: its wit and intelligence, its concerns and preoccupations. 
Selected from 126 entries from 17 African countries, the shortlist is once again a reflection of the Caine Prize’s pan-African reach.  The winner of the £10,000 prize is to be announced at a celebratory dinner at the Bodleian Library, Oxford, on Monday 11 July. The 2011 shortlist comprises: 
  • NoViolet Bulawayo (Zimbabwe) ‘Hitting Budapest’ from ‘The Boston Review’  Vol 35, no. 6 - Nov/Dec 2010  
  • Beatrice Lamwaka (Uganda) ‘Butterfly dreams’ from ‘Butterfly Dreams and Other New Short Stories from Uganda’ published by Critical, Cultural and Communications Press, Nottingham, 2010 
  • Tim Keegan (South Africa) ‘What Molly Knew’ from ‘Bad Company’ published by Pan Macmillan SA, 2008 
  • Lauri Kubuitsile (Botswana) ‘In the spirit of McPhineas Lata’ from ‘The Bed Book of Short Stories’ published by Modjaji Books, SA, 2010 
  • David Medalie (South Africa) ‘The Mistress’s Dog’ from ‘The Mistress’s Dog: Short stories  1996-2010’ published by Picador Africa, 2010 
As always the stories are available to read online on our website. Read more here.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Orange Prize for Fiction 2011 Shortlist

The Orange Prize for Fiction has announced its shortlist for the 2011 prize. From the long-list of 20 books written by women, the shortlist is made up of 6 books from different parts of the world. The number of African women authors have also dropped from 3 to 1: The Memory of Love by Aminatta Forna. Below is the list:
  • Room by Emma Donoghue 
  • The Memory of Love by Aminatta Forna
  • Grace Williams Says it Loud by Emma Henderson
  • Great House by Nicole Krauss
  • The Tiger’s Wife by Téa Obreht
  • Annabel by Kathleen Winter
Click here for the full announcement. We wish Aminatta Forna well in this award.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Commonwealth Writers Prize for Africa Region Shortlist

The Commonwealth Writers Prize for Africa Region Shortlist has been announced. I got this information from Accra Books and Things who also led me to Africa is a Country, where the list have been posted. In the Best Book category there are six books: 4 from South Africa, 1 from Nigeria and another 1 from Sierra Leone. In the First Best Book category there are again 6 books equally shared between Nigeria and South Africa. 

Hey! What are the writers in the other countries doing? Is this indicative of the dearth of excellent writers in the remaining fifty-two countries? 

Africa Best Book:
  1. The Memory of Love by Aminata Forna (Sierra Leone)
  2. Men of the South by Sukiswa Wanner (South Africa)
  3. The Unseen Leopard by Bridget Pitt (South Africa)
  4. Oil on Water by Helon Habila (Nigeria)
  5. Blood at Bay by Sue Rabie (South Africa)
  6. Banquet at Brabazan by Patricia Schonstein (South Africa)
Africa Best First Book:
  1. Happiness is a Four Letter Word by Cynthia Jele (South Africa)
  2. Bitter Leaf by Chioma Okereke (Nigeria)
  3. The Fossil Artist by Graeme Friedman (South Africa)
  4. Colour Blind by Uzoma Uponi (Nigeria)
  5. Voice of America by E.C. Osondu (Nigeria)
  6. Wall of Days by Alastair Bruce (South Africa)
The announcement of the winners would mean that my Commonwealth Writers Prize for Africa Region Reading Challenge would increase by two books. Like fractals, this is possibly a challenge that would not end, or whose end is a function of when organisers would stop awarding writers, at least for the African Region. And I hope it does not end.

Like Accra Books and Things, most of these writers are new to me especially the South African authors. I hope to expand my readings and enrich my mind with these readings.

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Man Booker Shortlist 2010

The Man Booker Shortlist came out yesterday, September 7, 2010. The list has been shortened from the longlist of thirteen (13) to a shortlist of six (6). This time the brouhaha that always follows a shortlist has been slightly muted as most people agree that all the shortlisted authors deserve to be there. Yes! But The Man Booker Prize, worth 50,000 Pounds, would not be Man Booker without the slightest controversies concerning those who are shortlisted. So the absence of Christos Tsiolkas, the Australian author of The Slap and David Mitchell's The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, has become an issue and it is very well being discussed by literary enthusiasts.

ImageNations interest is in Damon Galgut's In A Strange Room. If Damon's shortlisted book wins the Man Booker Prize he would be the third South African to win the prize, after Nadine Gordimer won with The Conservationist in 1974 and J.M. Coetzee won with Life and Times of Michael K in 1983 and with Disgrace in 1999. He would also be the fourth African to win the Booker Prize, after Ben Okri won the award in 1991 with The Famished Road.

Damon Galgut
In a Strange Room, voted 7/1 to win the Booker, is a tale of longing and thwarted desire, rage and compassion. The author, Damon Galgut, was born in Pretoria, South Africa, in 1963 and wrote his first novel, A Sinless Season, when he was 17. He was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2003 for The Good Doctor. His other books include Small Circle of Beings, The Beautiful Screaming of Pigs and The Imposter.

The Shortlist
  1. Parrot and Olivier in America by Peter Carey
  2. Room by Emma Donoghue
  3. In a Strange Room by Damon Galgut
  4. The Finkler Question by Howard Jacobson
  5. The Long Song by Andrea Levy
  6. C by Tom McCarthy
ImageNations wishes him well.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Shortlist for the 11th Caine Prize

On April 26, 2010, the shortlist for the 2010 Caine Prize for African Writing was announced. The Caine Prize, widely known as the ‘African Booker’ and regarded as Africa’s leading literary award, is now in its eleventh year

Chair Judge
The Chair Judge for this year's award, The Economist literary editor Fiammetta Rocco, said: "Africa has much to be proud of in these five writers. Not only are their stories all confident, ambitious and skillfully written, each one boasts an added dimension – a voice, character or particular emotional connection – that makes it uniquely powerful."

Joining Fiammetta on the judging panel this year are Granta deputy editor Ellah Allfrey, Professor Jon Cook of the University of East Anglia, and Georgetown University professor Samantha Pinto.

Entries
Selected from 115 entries from 13 African countries, the shortlist is once again a reflection of the Caine Prize’s pan-African reach. 

Award
The winner of the £10,000 prize is to be announced at a celebratory dinner at the Bodleian Library, Oxford, on Monday 5 July.

The 2010 shortlist comprises:
Read the full article at the Caine website here...

PS: The award was won by Olufemi Terry (Sierra Leone) for Stickfighting Days... click here

Friday, May 14, 2010

29. The Wasp and the Fig Tree by Brian Chikwava

Brian Chikwava is an African writer. His short story Seventh Street Alchemy was awarded the 2004 Caine Prize for African Writing and Chikwava became the first Zimbabwean to do so. Brian is among the exciting new generation of writers emerging on the African continent. Although born in Bulawayo, Chikwava's formative years were spent in Harare, where he attended university and frequented the popular artistes' venue The Book Café.

The Fig Tree and the Wasp is a short story I read at the Granta online magazine. This short story is an interesting and thought-provoking piece. It defines the author-artiste and projects him very much. I have not read anything by Brian save this short story and I am very much impressed by his writing.
The freedom for independence, which led to freedom of indulgence, the contraction of the 'long-illness' disease and the death of the the victim, is the trajectory upon which the story travels. The lives of men and women, boys and girls in the new Zimbabwe was likened to the behaviour of the wasp in the fig tree. According to the author '..in the fig-wasp world, when all the girls have flown away to lay their eggs elsewhere and propagate the species, the fig fruit only goes down with the boys. In the world of men, when the rot set into the compounds and townships, it spared neither sex. Big jawed or winged, they all came down in the silent darkness of their fruit', thus the title of the story.
 
Brian uses two characters Silingiwe and Screw Vet to represent the new generation of females and males, respectively, in the new Zimbabwe. The story also portrayed the hypocrisy in most African homes where any communication on sexual health is abhorred yet they live or dance away their sexual fantasies. This was aptly said in the story '...acting out their sexual fantasies but not talking about sexual health.' The acting was made prominent by the new wave of waist-twirling dance, iskokotsha, which took the new Zimbabwe by surprise leading to the new wave of sexual promiscuity and sexual indulgence leading to death and thus breaking the long-practiced tradition of children burying their parents. 

In its entirety, the story deserved to be acknowledged. Read the short story here at Granta.

ImageNations' Rating: 5.0 out of 6.0

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Today's Stories: Nana Awere Damoah and Nii Ayi Parkes

 Nana Awere Damoah
Nana Awere Damoah, the author of Excursions in My Mind, has published his latest book titled 'Through the Gates of Thought'. This book is a collection of stories, aphorisms, poetry and articles. Nana's literary exploit has taken him far and wide and his story 'Truth Floats' also appeared in the maiden edition of StoryTime's anthology African Roar

Nana receives his education in both Ghana and the UK. He is a chemical engineer at Unilever and still finds time to write. He is a family man whose closeness to his family led him to dedicate a whole blog just for his children. Through the Gates of Thought promises to be an interesting read. I would be interviewing the engineer, father, writer, author and man of virtues soon on this blog.

This new book is available on the world wide web through amazon.com click here to purchase...

Nii Ayikwei Parkes
Nii Ayikwei Parkes's poem ballast: a remix is one of the six shortlisted poems from over 150 entries gunning for The Michael Marks Awards for Poetry Pamphlets. 

According to NAP he comes from Ghana and writes poetry, short stories, articles, songs and, sometimes, rap for all ages. 

In its second year the award celebrates the importance of the pamphlet form in introducing new poetry to readers in the internet age. Read about the award here.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Featured post

Njoroge, Kihika, & Kamiti: Epochs of African Literature, A Reader's Perspective

Source Though Achebe's Things Fall Apart   (1958) is often cited and used as the beginning of the modern African novel written in E...