The Commonwealth Short Story Prize 2016 Shortlist Announced
The Commonwealth Short Story Prize 2016 Shortlist Announced
Commonwealth Short Story Prize
Regional
winners announced 4 May
4000 entries from 47
countries
26 writers on the shortlist
First translated
entry, from Bangladesh, on the shortlist
£15,000 in
prize money
Twenty-six “fresh and unexpected” stories make up the shortlist for this year’s Commonwealth Short Story Prize. In its fifth year, the prize is for the best piece of unpublished short fiction in English.
The shortlist covers a wide range of subject matter, from rivalry between chefs, a community of puppeteers in Delhi, society and class in Jamaica, genocide and revenge, to an advertising campaign for chewing gum in India and the heartbreak of Alzheimers.
Chair of the judges, South African novelist and playwright Gillian Slovo, said of this year’s shortlist:
“As a novelist accustomed to the luxury of the long form it has been a treat to discover writers who manage to crystallise such different experiences into so few words. The stories we have chosen for the shortlist are in turn comic, touching, poetic, mysterious but always fresh and unexpected.”
The prize is judged by an international panel of writers, representing each of the five regions of the Commonwealth. The 2016 judges are Helon Habila (Africa), Firdous Azim (Asia), Pierre J Mejlak (Canada and Europe), Olive Senior (Caribbean) and Patrick Holland (Pacific).
The regional winners will be announced on 4 May, and the winning stories will be published on Granta online. Commonwealth Writers is also working with the literary agents Aitken Alexander Associates Ltd to identify writers through this year’s prize, which is part funded by the Sigrid Rausing Trust.
Shortlist
Aabirah,
Sophia Khan (Pakistan)
A Visitation, Jane Healey (United
Kingdom)
Black Milk, Tina Makereti (New
Zealand)
Charmed, Jane Downing (Australia)
Children of
the Zocalo, Don McLellan (Canada)
Confluence, Nova
Gordon-Bell (Jamaica)
Cow and Company, Parashar Kulkarni
(India)
Dirty White Strings, Kritika Pandey
(India)
Eel, Stefanie Seddon (United
Kingdom)
Ethelbert and the Free Cheese,
Lance Dowrich
(Trinidad and Tobago)
Exorcism, Lausdeus Chiegboka
(Nigeria)
Girdhar’s Mansion, Sumit Ray
(India)
Imbecile, Craig S Whyte (United
Kingdom)
Instant Karma, Vinayak Varma (India)
Kurram
Valley, Munib A Khan (Pakistan)
Niroporadh Ghum (Innocent
Sleep),
Sumon Rahman (Bangladesh);
Translator:
Arunava Sinha
Saving Obadiah, Enyeribe Ibegwam
(Nigeria)
Space Invaders, Stuart Snelson
(United
Kingdom)
The Driver, Oyinkan Braithwaite (Nigeria)
The
Entomologist’s Dream, Andrew Salomon (South Africa)
The
Pigeon, Faraaz Mahomed (South Africa)
This Here Land,
Miranda Luby (Australia)
This is How We Burn, Cat
Hellisen
(South Africa)
Vestigial, Trent Lewin
(Canada)
When I Came Home, Mark Winkler
(South
Africa)
Where Mountains Weep, Bonnie Etherington (New Zealand) ends