Independent Foreign Fiction Prize 2009
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Winner
The Armies
Evelio RoseroMacLehose'Every time I begin to write it is out of desperation’
The Armies, Evelio Rosero’s portrait of the effect of civil war on one rural Colombian village, has a gentle opening that belies the horror to come.
The Armies
Evelio Rosero
Winner, Independent Foreign Fiction Prize
'Every time I begin to write it is out of desperation’
The Armies, Evelio Rosero’s portrait of the effect of civil war on one rural Colombian village, has a gentle opening that belies the horror to come.
Publisher: MacLehose
About the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize 2009
The Prize honours the best work of fiction by a living author, which has been translated into English from any other language and published in the United Kingdom. Uniquely, the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize gives the winning author and translator equal status: each receives £5,000.
First awarded in 1990 to Orhan Pamuk and translator Victoria Holbrook for The White Castle, the Prize ran until 1995 and was then revived in 2000 with the support of Arts Council England, who continue to fund the award. The 2012 prize was won by Aharon Appelfeld and Jeffrey M Green for Blooms of Darkness
Previous Winners
2012 Aharon Appelfeld, Blooms of Darkness translated by Jeffrey M Green (Alma), Hebrew
2011 Santiago Roncagliolo, Red April translated by Edith Grossman (Atlantic Books), Spanish
2010 Philippe Claudel, Brodeck's Report (translated by John Cullen; French) MacLehose Press
2009 Evelio Rosero, The Armies (translated by Anne McLean from the Spanish)
2008 Paul Verhaeghen, Omega Minor (translated by the author from the Dutch)
2007 José Eduardo Agualusa, The Book of Chameleons (Portuguese, trans. Daniel Hahn)
2006 Per Petterson, Out Stealing Horses (Norwegian; Anne Born; Harvill Secker)
2005 Frédéric Beigbeder, Windows on the World (French, trans. by Frank Wynne)
2004 Javier Cercas, Soldiers of Salamina (Translated from the Spanish by Anne McLean)
2003 Per Olov Enquist, The Visit of the Royal Physician (Swedish, Tiina Nunnally)
2002 W G Sebald (posthumously) Austerlitz (German, Anthea Bell)
1996-2001 Prize in abeyance.
1995 Gert Hofmann, The Film Explainer (German, Michael Hofmann)
1994 Bao Ninh, The Sorrow of War (Vietnamese, Phanh Thanh Hao)
1993 José Saramago, The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (Portuguese, Giovanni Pontiero)
1992 Simon Leys, The Death Of Napoleon (French, Patricia Clancy)
1991 Milan Kundera, Immortality (Czech, Peter Kussi)
1990 Orhan Pamuk, The White Castle (Turkish, Victoria Holbrook)
The 2013 Prize is for books published between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2012. The closing date was 28 September 2012.
Download the terms and conditions
For further information on the Award, please contact: prizes@booktrust.org.uk or 020 8516 2972
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