by MLYNXQUALEY, arablit.org | 2016-02-10 12:55 pm
The 2016 panel of judges for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF) was revealed this morning along with the prize’s six-novel shortlist:
It was the year’s judging chair, Emirati poet and academic Amina Thiban, who read out the names of the six shortlisted authors at a morning press conference in Muscat. Half have some previous IPAF connection: There are two books by authors who’ve formerly participated in IPAF nadwas, or workshops (Mohamad Rabie[1] and Shahla Ujayli[2]) and one formerly shortlisted novelist (Rabai al-Madhoun[3], for his The Lady from Tel Aviv[4]). There is also one debut novelist, Moroccan Tareq Bakari, with his Numedia. The full list:
Title | Author | Country of origin | Publisher |
Numedia | Tareq Bakari | Morocco | Dar al-Adab |
Destinies: Concerto of the Holocaust and the Nakba | Rabai al-Madhoun | Palestine | Maktabat Kul Shee |
Mercury[5] | Mohamed Rabie | Egypt | Dar Tanweer, Lebanon |
Praise for the Women of the Family | Mahmoud Shukair | Palestine | Hachette Antoine |
A Sky Close to Our House | Shahla Ujayli | Syria | Difaf Publications |
The Guard of the Dead | George Yaraq | Lebanon | Difaf Publications |
The other five judges, who were also announced this morning, are Egyptian journalist and poet Sayyed Mahmoud, Moroccan academic and critic Mohammed Mechbal, Bosnian academic Munir Muji?, and Lebanese poet, children’s-book author, and editor-in-chief of Al-Hayat Abdo Wazen.
The prize winner will be announced in Abu Dhabi on April 26, on the eve of the 2016 Abu Dhabi International Book Fair. The six shortlisted finalists will receive $10,000, with an additional $50,000 going to the winner.
Interviews with the six shortlisted authors:
Shahla Ujayli (@ShahlaUjayli[7]): The characters’ individual tragedies ‘seem harsher than the collective tragedy’ [8]
Mohamad Rabie (@MohRabie78[9]): On the ‘hope that clouds observation’[10]
Rabai al-Madhoun (@rmadhoun[11]): On his previously shortlisted novel, The Lady from Tel Aviv[12]
George Yarak: On the book that IPAF judge Abdo Wazen ‘encouraged him to finish’[13]
Tareq Bakari: On ‘those beautiful Amazigh worlds which form the unique core of the novel’[14]
Mahmoud Shukair (@MahmoudShukair[15]): On ‘contemplating the lives of a Bedouin Palestinian tribe’[16]
Excerpts in translation:
Mohamed Rabie’s Mercury (Otared), trans. Robin Moger[17]
Watch the video of this morning’s announcement:
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