๐ Chapter 05 ยท Topic 02 ยท International Awards
International Literary Awards
Man Booker Prize, International Booker Prize, Pulitzer Prize โ Indian winners and key facts.
๐ Man Booker Prize
- Awarded for the best original novel written in English and published in the UK
- Established in 1969; prize: ยฃ50,000
- Administered by the Booker Prize Foundation
- From 2014, eligibility extended to any English-language novel published in the UK (not just Commonwealth authors)
๐ฎ๐ณ Indian Winners of Man Booker Prize
| Author | Year | Novel | Key Fact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salman Rushdie | 1981 | Midnight’s Children | Also won “Booker of Bookers” (1993 and 2008); Indian-British; born Mumbai |
| Arundhati Roy | 1997 | The God of Small Things | Set in Kerala; debut novel; first Indian woman to win Booker |
| Kiran Desai | 2006 | The Inheritance of Loss | Set in Darjeeling; daughter of Anita Desai |
| Aravind Adiga | 2008 | The White Tiger | Debut novel; class struggle in India; narrator is a driver |
๐ International Booker Prize
- Awarded for fiction translated into English and published in the UK or Ireland
- Prize shared equally between author and translator: ยฃ50,000
- Formerly called the Man Booker International Prize
- Geetanjali Shree won the International Booker Prize in 2022 for “Tomb of Sand” (originally written in Hindi as “Ret Samadhi”) โ translated by Daisy Rockwell
- This was the first Hindi-language novel to win the International Booker Prize
๐ฐ Pulitzer Prize
- Awarded for achievements in journalism, literature, and musical composition in the USA
- Established by Joseph Pulitzer (newspaper publisher); administered by Columbia University, New York
- First awarded in 1917
- Categories: Journalism (15 categories), Letters/Drama/Music (7 categories)
- Prize: $15,000 + certificate (except Public Service โ gold medal)
- Indian/Indian-origin winners:
- Gobind Behari Lal (1937) โ first Indian to win Pulitzer; science journalism
- Jhumpa Lahiri (2000) โ Fiction; “Interpreter of Maladies”; Indian-American
- Geeta Anand (2003) โ Journalism; Wall Street Journal
- Siddhartha Mukherjee (2011) โ General Non-Fiction; “The Emperor of All Maladies”
- Vijay Seshadri (2014) โ Poetry; “3 Sections”
โญ Geetanjali Shree โ International Booker 2022: Geetanjali Shree became the first Indian author to win the International Booker Prize in 2022 for “Tomb of Sand” (Ret Samadhi). The novel is about an 80-year-old woman in North India who, after her husband’s death, embarks on a journey to Pakistan to confront her past. It was translated into English by Daisy Rockwell. The win was celebrated as a landmark moment for Hindi literature and Indian regional language fiction globally.
๐ Booker of Bookers: The “Booker of Bookers” is a special prize awarded to the best novel among all Booker Prize winners. It has been awarded twice: in 1993 (25th anniversary) and 2008 (40th anniversary). Both times, Salman Rushdie’s “Midnight’s Children” (1981) won. This makes it the most celebrated Booker Prize winner of all time.
โ Revision Checklist
โ
Man Booker Prize = 1969 = best English novel = ยฃ50,000
โ Salman Rushdie = 1981 = Midnight’s Children = “Booker of Bookers” (1993, 2008)
โ Arundhati Roy = 1997 = The God of Small Things = first Indian woman
โ Kiran Desai = 2006 = The Inheritance of Loss
โ Aravind Adiga = 2008 = The White Tiger
โ International Booker 2022 = Geetanjali Shree = Tomb of Sand = first Hindi novel
โ Pulitzer Prize = Columbia University = journalism + literature + music
โ First Indian Pulitzer = Gobind Behari Lal (1937)
โ Jhumpa Lahiri = 2000 = Fiction = Interpreter of Maladies
โ Siddhartha Mukherjee = 2011 = The Emperor of All Maladies
โ Salman Rushdie = 1981 = Midnight’s Children = “Booker of Bookers” (1993, 2008)
โ Arundhati Roy = 1997 = The God of Small Things = first Indian woman
โ Kiran Desai = 2006 = The Inheritance of Loss
โ Aravind Adiga = 2008 = The White Tiger
โ International Booker 2022 = Geetanjali Shree = Tomb of Sand = first Hindi novel
โ Pulitzer Prize = Columbia University = journalism + literature + music
โ First Indian Pulitzer = Gobind Behari Lal (1937)
โ Jhumpa Lahiri = 2000 = Fiction = Interpreter of Maladies
โ Siddhartha Mukherjee = 2011 = The Emperor of All Maladies