Hungarian British author David Szalay wins Booker Prize 2025 for ‘Flesh’
'Flesh' is about an emotionally detached man who is unravelled by a series of events beyond his grasp.
PTI
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David Szalay, 51, has been presented with 50,000 pounds and a trophy (PTI)
London, 11 Nov
Hungarian British author David Szalay was named the winner
of the Booker Prize 2025 for his novel ‘Flesh’, beating Indian author Kiran
Desai’s ‘The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny’ at a ceremony in London.
Szalay, 51, was presented with 50,000 pounds and a trophy on
Monday night by last year’s Booker winner Samantha Harvey for his novel about
an emotionally detached man who is unravelled by a series of events beyond his
grasp.
“Using only the sparest of prose, this hypnotically tense and
compelling book becomes an astonishingly moving portrait of a man’s life,” the
Booker Prize judges said of their winning choice.
Desai missed out on becoming only the fifth double winner in
Booker Prize’s 56-year history, having won the coveted literary prize for
fiction back in 2006 for ‘The Inheritance of Loss’.
“I wanted to write a book about global loneliness through
the lens of a long, unresolved love story,” Desai has said of her new novel.
“I wanted to write a present-day romance with an old-fashioned
beauty. In the past of my parents, and certainly my grandparents, an Indian
love story would mostly be rooted in one community, one class, one religion,
and often also one place. But a love story in today’s globalised world would
likely wander in so many different directions,” she said.
At 667 pages, ‘The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny’ was
described by the Booker judges as “an epic of love and family, India and
America, tradition and modernity” revolving around a pair of young Indians –
Sonia and Sunny.
“An intimate and expansive epic about two people finding a
pathway to love and each other. Rich in meditations about class, race and
nationhood, this book has it all,” the judges said of the Indian author's
latest work.
“The writing moves with consummate fluency between an array
of modes: philosophical, comic, earnest, emotional, and uncanny,” they praised.
However, it was 'Flesh' that won over the judges in the end
and was unveiled as the 2025 winner at a ceremony at Old Billingsgate in
London.
"What we particularly liked about 'Flesh' was its
singularity. It's just not like any other book. It's a dark book, but we all
found it a joy to read," said Irish novelist Roddy Doyle, Booker Prize
2025 chair of judges.
Other works in the race for the big prize included
‘Flashlight’ by American Korean author Susan Choi, ‘Audition’ by American
Japanese writer Katie Kitamura, ‘The Rest of Our Lives’ by British American Ben
Markovits, and English novelist Andrew Miller’s ‘The Land in Winter'. All six
shortlisted authors will receive 2,500 pounds and a specially bound edition of
their book.
“The six have, I think, two big things in common. Their
authors are in total command of their own store of English, their own rhythm,
their own expertise; they have each crafted a novel that no one else could have
written,” said Doyle.
“And all of the books, in six different and very fresh ways,
find their stories in the examination of the individual trying to live with –
to love, to seek attention from, to cope with, to understand, to keep at bay,
to tolerate, to escape from – other people. In other words, they are all
brilliantly written and they are all brilliantly human,” he added.
Doyle’s fellow judges for the 2025 panel included Booker
Prize longlisted novelist Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀̀; award-winning actor, producer and
publisher Sarah Jessica Parker; writer, broadcaster and literary critic Chris
Power; and Booker Prize-longlisted author Kiley Reid.
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