South Korean novelist Han wins Man Booker International Prize.
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South Korean
author Han Kang won the Man Booker International Prize for fiction on
Monday for her novel "The Vegetarian", a dark, surreal story about a
woman who gives up eating meat and seeks to become a tree. The
45-year-old Han had been short-listed for the prize for fiction in
translation to English along with Italian writer Elena Ferrante,
Angola's Jose Eduardo Agualusa, Chinese author Yan Lianke, Turkey's
Orhan Pamuk and Austrian Robert Seethaler.
"This
compact, exquisite and disturbing book will linger long in the minds,
and maybe the dreams, of its readers," Boyd Tonkin, chairman of the 2016
judging panel, was cited by the foundation as saying.
The novel was translated by Deborah Smith, a 28-year-old Briton who only began learning Korean when she was 21.
Han
and Smith will split the 50,000 pound ($72,000) prize equally,
according to the Booker Foundation, which administers the prize as well
as the original Man Booker Prize for works in English and published in
the United Kingdom, a prestigious award that typically leads to a surge
in sales for its winner.
In "The
Vegetarian", after struggling with gruesome recurring nightmares,
Yeong-hye, a dutiful wife, rebels against societal norms, forsaking meat
and stirring concern among her family that she is mentally ill.
Han,
who was born in the South Korean city of Gwangju, teaches creative
writing at the Seoul Institute of the Arts. "The Vegetarian" is her
first novel translated into English.
The Man Booker
International Prize was previously awarded every two years for an
author's overall contribution to global fiction, but beginning with this
year's prize it is awarded annually for a single work of fiction
translated into English and published in the United Kingdom.
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