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Exile, witchcraft, virginity: Women authors dominate International Booker shortlist

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Women authors dominate the International Booker Prize shortlist with novels about an exiled Iranian family, a French suburban witch and an Albanian sworn virgin. (The Brooker Prizes)

Women authors dominate the International Booker Prize shortlist with novels about an exiled Iranian family, a French suburban witch and an Albanian sworn virgin. (The Brooker Prizes)

LONDON: Novels by women writers about a family exiled from Iran, a suburban French witch, and an Albanian sworn virgin have made the shortlist for the International Booker Prize, organizers announced Tuesday.

The prestigious award, to be handed out at a ceremony at London's Tate Modern gallery on May 19, recognizes works of fiction from around the world that have been translated into English.


The £50,000 ($62,000) prize is split equally between the author and the translator.


This is the tenth year that the prize has been awarded in its current form. Organizers say the award gives the authors a significant boost in profile and sales.


Four winners have gone on to become Nobel laureates.


The books on this year's list feature "unforgettable characters" and "reverberate with history", said the chair of the judges, British novelist Natasha Brown.


The shortlist includes several established authors.


"The Director", set in the Nazi-controlled film industry, is by bestselling German-Austrian writer Daniel Kehlmann, who is known for darkly funny historical novels and is the only male author on the list.


Another prominent figure is French novelist and playwright Marie NDiaye, winner of the country's top Goncourt prize, whose books have been widely translated.


Her novel "The Witch" is about a woman living in the suburbs in the 1990s who passes magical powers on to her daughters.


Brazilian Ana Paula Maia is author of seven novels and has been selected for "On Earth As It Is Beneath", a horrifying tale of a brutal prison colony in a remote wilderness.


The shortlist also features two debut novels.


"The Nights Are Quiet In Tehran", a saga by German writer Shida Bazyar, is about a family fleeing Iran and then returning decades later.


The other is "She Who Remains" by award-winning Bulgarian poet and writer Rene Karabash, about a woman who opts to become a "sworn virgin" – a vanishing Albanian tradition under which a woman renounces marriage and lives as a man.