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The Michael King Writers’ Centre joins the New Zealand literary and book community in congratulating Eleanor Catton for winning the 2013 Man Booker Prize for Literature for her novel The Luminaries.
The
Man Booker Prize is arguably the world’s most prestigious award for
literature. Eleanor is the youngest writer ever to win the award and only the
second New Zealander. The award was announced at a ceremony at the Guildhall
in London this morning.
The Luminaries is an 832-page novel set in during the goldrush in Hokitika in the 1860s. Although it has a complex plot and is full of astrological allusions, it reads as a thriller that explores notions of wealth and value. There were more than 150 entries for the Man Booker Prize this year and Eleanor’s book was one of six on the short-list, which included the world’s top writers. Michael King Writers’ Centre chair Catriona Ferguson, who is also chief executive of the NZ Book Council, said the win is an amazing achievement and she congratulated all of those involved, including Catton’s New Zealand publisher Victoria University Press.
"Eleanor is an extraordinary talent. This is matched by
her dedication to her craft and sheer hard work. The Luminaries is only her second published
novel. It is a very fine book and she is a very fine writer, with a huge
future ahead of her."
Ms Ferguson said she was delighted that the Michael King
Writers’ Centre had been able to make a contribution to her success. Catton
wrote the final draft of The
Luminaries while she was a writer in residence at the centre last
year, holding the six-month University of Auckland Residency, which is
supported by Creative New Zealand. She also worked on the novel while she
held the Ursula Bethel Residency at the University of Canterbury in 2011.
Catton’s comments about her time at the centre and the benefit
of residencies such as this can be read on the
Michael King Writers’ Centre web site
“Many New Zealand writers depend on the grants and awards that
are available to produce major works such as this, and many of these are
supported by Creative New Zealand. This investment in New Zealand writing
will pay dividends in terms of the international exposure to New Zealand and
our stories.”
The only other New Zealand writer to win the Man Booker Prize
is Keri Hulme for The Bone
People in 1985. Mr
Pip by Lloyd Jones was on the shortlist for the Man Booker Prize
in 2007 and won several other awards. It has recently been released on film.
Since her residency last year Eleanor Catton has moved to Auckland and
teaches part-time in the creative writing programme at MIT in Manukau.
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Former leading New Zealand publisher and bookseller, and widely experienced judge of both the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, talks about what he is currently reading, what impresses him and what doesn't, along with chat about the international English language book scene, and links to sites of interest to booklovers.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Congratulations to Eleanor Catton from the Michael King Writers’ Centre
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