Dundee International Book Prize reveals
top 10 shortlist
Ten aspiring novelists have been shortlisted for the sixth Dundee International
Book Prize, after more than a hundred entries were received from around the
globe.
Judges from the Scottish Book Trust turned the pages of a total
of 110 novels to whittle the list down to ten candidates all bidding
for the chance of winning the £10,000 prize, which is the
highest in the UK for an unpublished writer.
Among the top ten are writers from Newport in Wales, Colinsburgh
in Fife, South Miami in Florida and Cape Town, South Africa.
Extracts of the top ten have been published online at www.literarydundee.co.uk/bookprize.htm as part of the Prize, an annual collaboration between the University
of Dundee, Polygon and Dundee City Council’s ‘One City,
Many Discoveries’ campaign, which is this year sponsored
by Apex Hotels, Dundee.
The top ten will now be whittled down to a final three books and
the eventual winner will be picked by judges David Robinson and
Cynthia Rogerson.
David Robinson is the Books Editor of the Scotsman newspaper and
an author - his book ˜In Cold Ink” was published by
Birlinn in 2009. He has interviewed many of the greatest writers
alive, champions literature and supporting new voices, wherever
they are from in the world. Born in Bradford, he has been a newspaper
journalist all his working life. He lives with his wife and two
children in Edinburgh.
David says: “This is a fantastic prize which richly rewards
new writers. It is so difficult for debut authors to get noticed
so this is a great opportunity.”
Cynthia Rogerson is a Californian living in Ross-shire. Her first
novel, Upstairs in the Tent, was published in 2001; her short stories
and poems have been short-listed for competitions, anthologised,
published in literary magazines and broadcast on BBC radio. In
2008 she won the VS Pritchett short story award. She is the co-director
of Moniack Mhor, an Arvon Writing Centre in Inverness-shire. Her
second novel, Love Letters from my Deathbed, was published in 2007,
and her next novel I Love You Goodbye, will be published in July.
Cynthia says: “I’m very excited to be a judge on the
Dundee International Book Prize. It’s very good news indeed
that new writers are given this chance in what is a crazy, impossibly
difficult phase of publishing.”
The winner will be announced at a dinner on Friday 24th June in
front of an audience of industry experts, shortlisted writers and
sponsors of the prize. They will also speak at the Dundee Literary
Festival no Saturday 25th June.
Anna Day, University of Dundee and Director of the Dundee Literary
Festival, comments: “The shortlist reflects a wide variety
of styles of writing from debut authors across the world – we
received entries from the USA, Spain, Germany, Italy and South
Africa. There are some fantastic stories in the top ten, and it’s
going to be tricky to choose a winner but as always we’re
looking for a creative new voice who demonstrated innovation and
the ability to create a real page-turner.”
Councillor Will Dawson, Convenor of City Development for Dundee
City Council, adds: “The Book Prize is a fantastic way of
discovering new writing talent, and it’s inspiring to see
so many entries come in from would-be authors around the world.
Dundee is committed to supporting innovation and the city is a
hub of creativity – whether that’s in the arts, digital
gaming or music. The Book Prize shows that we’re serious
about recognising and celebrating that talent!”
Last year, local crime writer Chris Longmuir secured a publishing
deal and the £10,000 prize for her fiction novel Dead Wood
which is set in Dundee and uncovers the terrifying truth behind
a serial killer who seems to take his fatal inspiration from the
Templeton Woods murders of 1980.
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