Saturday, 11 October 2014

Debut novel wins prize

Paul Kingsnorth has been announced as the winner of the second annual Gordon Burn Prize for his debut novel The Wake.

The announcement, made at a special event at Durham Book Festival in North East England, came after deliberations by a judging panel which comprised actor Julian Barratt, poet John Burnside, artist Sarah Lucas, and last year’s inaugural prize winner, novelist Benjamin Myers.

Set in the three years after the Norman invasion of 1066, The Wake tells the story of Buccmaster of Holland, a man from the Lincolnshire Fens, who, with a fractured band of guerrilla fighters, takes up arms against the invaders. It is a post-apocalyptic story of the brutal shattering of lives, a tale of lost gods and haunted visions, narrated by a man bearing witness to the end of his world.

Judge Benjamin Myers said: “The ‘shadow tongue’ vocabulary that is the novel’s architecture automatically makes The Wake a unique entity, yet it is so much more than a dazzling display of linguistic flair.

“Paul Kingsnorth creates his own world – that of an old England that is both familiar yet utterly alien – and pulls you in to bear witness to our own bloody history first hand. Poetry, landscape, mythology and language are shot through with fleeting flashes of violence on which modern society is founded. Months after first reading it, part of me is still within this novel, and I truly believe future generations will regard The Wake as a classic.”
Paul Kingsnorth is the author of two non-fiction books, One No, Many Yeses (2003) and the highly acclaimed Real England (2008), as well as a collection of poetry, Kidland (2011). A former journalist and deputy editor of The Ecologist magazine, he has won several awards for his poetry and essays. In 2009, he co-founded the Dark Mountain Project, an international network of writers, artists and thinkers in search of new stories for troubled times. Much of his writing can be found online at www.paulkingsnorth.net. The Wake is his first novel.
The Wake is published by Unbound, a crowdsource funding platform, whose investors include actor Mark Rylance.

The Gordon Burn Prize, run in partnership by New Writing North, Faber & Faber, and the Gordon Burn Trust, was conceived to pay tribute to the legacy of the late author. Newcastle-born Gordon was a literary polymath, writing on subjects ranging from celebrity to serial killers, politics to contemporary art, sport to the media.

The shortlist for the prize this year was: The Valley by Richard Benson (Bloomsbury), The Kills by Richard House (Picador), The Wake by Paul Kingsnorth (Unbound), The Trip to Echo Spring by Olivia Laing (Canongate), American Interior by Gruff Rhys (Hamish Hamilton), and The Free by Willy Vlautin (Faber & Faber).


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