Douglas Stuart has been crowned this year’s winner of the Booker Prize for Fiction, taking the award for his debut novel Shuggie Bain. A beautiful story set in working-class Glasgow that follows the heartbreaking and emotive relationship between Hugh "Shuggie" Bain and his mother, Agnes.
Chair of judges for the prize, Margaret Busby, said it “is destined to be a classic — a moving, immersive and nuanced portrait of a tight-knit social world, its people and its values."
She added: “Gracefully and powerfully written, this is a novel that has impact because of its many emotional registers and its compassionately realised characters.”
Before saying it "can make you cry and make you laugh — a daring, frightening and life-changing novel”.
Douglas Stuart beat five other titles from the most diverse shortlist yet – debut novelists dominated, four of the six finalists were women and apart from Tsitsi Dangarembga, all are from the US or hold joint US citizenship.
The award is widely regarded as the UK’s most prestigious literary award, recognising the best fiction written in the English-language and published in the UK and Ireland between 1 October 2019 and 30 September 2020.
For the first year, the ceremony was a digitalised event and broadcast in partnership with the BBC from London’s Roundhouse. It saw a pre-recorded message from Barack Obama who noted that it is fiction’s power that means we can "put ourselves in someone else’s shoes, understand their struggles, and imagine new ways to tackle complex problems and effect change”.
While The Duchess of Cornwall shared her thoughts on the importance of reading during the pandemic, noting that “as long as we can read, we can travel, we can escape, we can explore, we can laugh, we can cry and we can grapple with life’s mysteries”.
Other key speakers included Booker Prize and Nobel Prize for Literature winner author Kazuo Ishiguro, along with Bernardine Evaristo and Margaret Atwood, last year’s joint victors.
The topics covered within this year’s shortlisted novels were wide-ranging, including stories about climate change, the hardship of life in Zimbabwe, dementia and women soldiers in 1935 Ethiopia. What is clear from the scope is that books provide us with the opportunity to be immersed in storytelling and marvel at what unheard voices have to say. It truly is magical.
Often the very best books are the ones that evoke emotion and eloquently touch on important issues, and that’s exactly what this year’s winning novel does so well. In honour of the Booker Prize announcement, we take a look at Shuggie Bain and the previous five top Booker titles that preceded it, all of which showcase the wonders of the written word.
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