Howard Jacobson and Michael Frayn go head-to-head for second win of UK’s
leading comic fiction prize
Howard Jacobson and Michael Frayn are going for a second bite
of the cherry as they appear on the shortlist of this year’s Bollinger
Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction announced today, Thursday 4
April 2013. They are joined on what the judges consider to be an exceptionally
strong shortlist by Joseph Connolly, Deborah Moggach and Helen
DeWitt.
The 2013 shortlist was selected following many hours of deliberation and glasses of
Bollinger by the judges. As soon as white smoke indicated the selection of this
year’s funniest fiction, Jim Naughtie headed straight to Rome to cover the
Pope’s inauguration mass for the BBC.
Three authors have been appeared on the
prize list before. Howard Jacobson won the first ever Bollinger Everyman
Wodehouse Prize in 2000 for his novel The Mighty Waltzer, whilst Frayn
won the prize two years later for his novel Spies (2002). Jacobson was
also shortlisted for Kalooki Nights in 2006, whilst Deborah Moggach was
shortlisted in 2004 for These Foolish Things.
Now in its 14th year, the prize strives to
recognise the best comic novel of the last 12 months. Past winners have
included critically acclaimed writers such as Will Self, Ian McEwan and, most
recently, Terry Pratchett for Snuff. The shortlist spans a variety of
themes, locations and time periods, but each novel captures the comic spirit of
P.G. Wodehouse.
The five shortlisted novels are:
·
Zoo Time by Howard Jacobson (Bloomsbury)
Zoo Time is the ‘seriously funny’ (Daily Telegraph) tale
of Guy Ableman, a writer in torment – both over his affections for both his
wife and mother-in-law, and the terminal state of literature. As well as winning the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize in 2000, Jacobson has won the Man Booker Prize
(2010) for The Finkler Question.
·
Skios by Michael Frayn (Faber & Faber)
Longlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2012, Skios
is a farce about a case of mistaken identity which plays out over a sunlit
island of Skios. ‘The result is a wonderfully diverting entertainment,
something Wodehouse might have written if Blandings Castle had been perched on
the edge of the Aegean.’ (Financial Times)
·
England’s Lane by Joseph Connolly (Quercus)
Described as ‘a masterpiece’ (The Daily Mail) and ‘a weird mix of
Dickens and Martin Amis… quite impossible to put down’ (The Times), this
latest novel from critically acclaimed and internationally bestselling author
Joseph Connolly is a ‘darkly humorous’ (Time Out) account of three
married couples living in England’s Lane in the winter of 1959, and the sins
hidden behind the suburban livelihoods of the town’s ironmonger, sweetshop and
butcher
·
Heartbreak Hotel by Deborah Moggach (Chatto & Windus)
From the author of Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and Tulip Fever,
Heartbreak Hotel tells the story of Russell ‘Buffy’ Buffery and his new
money-making wheeze, ‘Courses for Divorces’. Currently being adapted into a
series for the BBC, Heartbreak Hotel is told with ‘all the warmth and
humour you’d expect from Moggach’ (The Guardian).
·
Lightning Rods by Helen DeWitt (And Other Stories)
DeWitt’s second novel is an ‘uproariously funny’ (Wall Street
Journal) tale following failing salesman Joe as he launches an outrageous
plan to stamp out sexual harassment in the workplace. Her critically acclaimed
debut novel The Last Samurai has so far been published in 20 countries.
The judges of the prize are: Jim Naughtie, broadcaster and author; David
Campbell, Everyman’s Library publisher and Peter Florence, Director of The
Telegraph Hay Festival. David Campbell comments on the shortlist:
“This is one of the strongest shortlists I have seen – all 5 novels are
truly brilliantly funny.”
As is customary, this year’s winner will be announced just ahead of the
Hay festival in late May, followed by an audience with the winner during the
festival. The winner will receive a jeroboam of Bollinger Special Cuvée, a case of Bollinger La Grande Année and a set of the Everyman
Wodehouse collection which now totals over 80 books. The winner will also be
honoured with the presentation of a locally-bred Gloucestershire Old Spot pig,
who will be named after their winning title.
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