Jeet Thayil, an Indian poet and author, won the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature at the Jaipur Literature Festival on Friday for his debut novel âNarcopolis.â
âFinally!â Mr. Thayil exclaimed when he was presented the award. His book, about the narcotic underbelly of Bombay 30 years ago, had been short-listed for four awards, but never won any.
The award is special because it is an Indian prize, he said. âHow you are perceived at home does matter,â he said
The Kerala-born author will take home a $50,000 prize purse. Mr. Thayil noted that it was a substantial amount of money, and part of the reason that the award was taken seriously.
âWriters like money,â he said. âWe donât have a job, but we have bills to pay.â
Mr. Thayil is the first Indian to win the award since its introduction by the infrastructure company DSC Limited in 2010. The first winner was a Pakistani writer, H.M. Naqvi, for his debut novel the âHome Boy.â Last year the Sri Lankan author Shehan Karunatilakeâ s novel âChinamanâ won the prize.
A five-member jury received more than 80 entries for the prize, including translations of non-English writing. The contest is open to any writing about South Asia, not just to South Asian writers. The Indian poet and literary critic K. Satchidanandan, who led the jury, said, the award is significant because it is the first award that honors literary works about South Asia.
Other finalists included two Indians, two Pakistanis and a Bangladeshi writer.Jamil Ahmed, a Pakistani author whose book, âThe Wandering Falcon,â was a finalist, said that it took 40 years to publish the book. The retired bureaucrat wrote about the tribal population living along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. He was born in pre-partition India and during his childhood he traveled across India with his family. That was when he said he first came in contact with tribes, which led him to âromanticize the tribes.â
âI want people to understand that tribes are not savage,â he said.
A work by the Indian author Uday Prakash, âThe Walls of Delhi,â was also a finalist. The book, actually three novellas, was originally written in Hindi. The stories highlight the flaws of the state, including bureaucracy and the deep entrenchment of corruption, and it is narrated by three characters, a weaver, sweeper and a baby in a slum suffering from an undiagnosed disease. Mr. Prakash said hese narratives symbolized the lives led by 70 percent Indians.
Other finalists included the Indian writer Amitav Ghosh for his book âRiver of Smoke,â the Pakistani writer Mohammed Hanif, for âOur Lady of Alice Bhattiâ and Tahmima Anam, the author of âThe Good Muslim,â from Bangladesh.
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