Booker judges break rules to honour novelists Atwood and Evaristo
This
year's Booker Prize goes against the rules and traditions of the award
by naming both Margaret Atwood and Bernardine Evaristo as joint winners
on Monday.
The two winners were narrowed down from a shortlist of six authors. Atwood is recognized for "The Testaments," a sequel to "A Handmaid's Tale." Evaristo won for her book "Girl, Woman, Other."
This
will only be the third time that a dual award has been given. In fact,
the award changed its rules in 1993 to clearly state that "the prize may not be divided or withheld" after the second two-author win.
But the judges said they simply couldn't make a decision.
"Over
an agonizing five hours, the 2019 Booker Prize judges discussed all of
the much-loved books on their shortlist, and found it impossible to
single out one winner," said Gaby Wood, literary director of the Booker
Prize Foundation, in a statement.
"The
Booker Prize has been jointly awarded twice before, to Nadine Gordimer
and Stanley Middleton in 1974 and to Michael Ondaatje and Barry Unsworth
in 1992," according to the Booker Prize website.
Their
individual awards in themselves have made history. This is Atwood's
second Booker Prize and she will be the oldest recipient the award has
ever had at 79. Evaristo will be the first ever black woman to win a
Booker Prize.
The two authors will split the £50,000 (about $63,000) prize money.
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