Salman Rushdie misses out on Booker
Salman Rushdie has failed to make the Man Booker Prize shortlist, despite being widely tipped to win the £50,000 award for his novel The Enchantress of Florence. Among the six hopefuls are two first-time novelists, Aravind Adiga, for The White Tiger, who at 35 is the youngest writer ever to make the shortlist, and Steve Toltz with his debut, A Fraction of The Whole. Linda Grant is the only woman to make the list. The other three are Philip Hensher, Sebastian Barry and Indian writer Amitav Ghosh Murray.
The winning writer will be handed the prize in London on October 14. Michael Portillo, the chair of judges, called the six final works "intensely readable", adding they are "extraordinary examples of imagination and narrative".
Three of the authors have a history with the prize. Sebastian Barry was shortlisted in 2005 for his novel A Long, Long Way, Linda Grant was longlisted in 2002 for her novel Still Here and Philip Hensher, once a Booker judge himself, was longlisted in 2002 for his novel The Mulberry Empire.
His exclusion will be a blow to Rusdhie, though he can console himself with having won the "Booker of Bookers" for his 1981 novel Midnight's Children, which was held earlier this year to mark the award’s 40th anniversary.
The full shortlist is: Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger; Sebastian Barry, The Secret Scripture; Amitav Ghosh, Sea of Poppies; Linda Grant, The Clothes on Their Backs; Philip Hensher, The Northern Clemency; Steve Toltz, A Fraction of The Whole.
Synopses of all six novelsCoppers 'locked Rushdie in cupboard'
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