Zimbabwe's NoViolet Bulawayo on Tuesday
became the first black African woman to be shortlisted for the Man Booker
Prize, for her tale of a 10-year-old girl who escapes poverty at home only to
find new problems in the United States.
Bulawayo was nominated for her novel We Need
New Names, which follows the girl's decision to leave a shanty town in Zimbabwe
and move to live with an aunt in the United States.
The author, whose real name is Elizabeth
Zandile Tshele, is also the first Zimbabwean to be shortlisted for the
prestigious prize.
The winner is awarded €59 000 (R784 000) and
normally sees a significant boost in sales.
'I feel very lucky and honoured'
Bulawayo told AFP that she had no idea she
would be on the shortlist and said it was an "amazing feeling" - as
well as being a little a bit "awkward".
"I feel there are so many deserving
black women who came before me. So I feel very lucky and honoured, especially
as this is my first novel," she said.
Bulawayo would be the fourth African winner
if she triumphs on 15 October.
South African writer JM Coetzee won in 1983
and 1999, while another South African writer, Nadine Gordimer, was joint winner
for her novel The Conservationist in 1974.
Nigerian-born Ben Okri won for his third
novel The Famished Road in 1991.
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