Iran Times

Iranian woman is Booker literary award nominee

July 24, 2020

AZAR. . . on the longlist
AZAR. . . on the longlist

An  Iranian-Australian woman has been nominated to receive a Booker award, the most prestigious award for novelists in the English-speaking world.

When Shokoofeh Azar was a teenager in Tehran, she often dreamed about winning the Booker Prize. When the winning books were translated into Farsi, she would devour them. “I followed all of the Booker Prize winners,” she says, “and always wanted to win the Booker one day.”

Now she has the chance to win one of the Booker prizes – the International Booker – after her novel, The Enlightenment of the Greengage Tree, was put on the longlist for the 50,000 pound ($64,000) prize, which is shared between the author and translator of the winning book. The annual prize is given to a single novel or short-story collection translated into English and published in Britain or Ireland.

“It is very important for Iranians because it’s the first time an Iranian goes for this prize,” Azar says. “Lots of Iranian people who work in literature or are book readers are really excited about that.”

Azar worked as a journalist in Iran, covering social affairs. But she was arrested several times and endured spells in jail, including three months in solitary confinement. Her family told her she had to flee the country.

She came to Australia as an asylum seeker in 2011, traveling from Indonesia to Christmas Island in a small boat along with 75 other people. After 25 days on the island she spent a further six months in detention before she was released.  She arrived before Australia passed the current law that prohibits all such “boat people” from ever gaining legal admission to Australia.

The Enlightenment of the Greengage Tree is about an intellectual family in Iran and is set after the 1979 revolution. Azar said the narrator, 13-year-old Bahar, is a picture of herself as a teenager.

“It was published in Farsi in Tehran, but underground. It means people can’t buy it in bookshops, but they can order it on some websites. I am very happy that it is available,” she says. “You always want your first readers to be from your culture and country. My novel is based on lots of cultural legends and Iranian myths.

“It would be nice if everybody in Iran had access from the bookshops. But I think it is a great step to publish the book underground.”

The Enlightenment of the Greengage Tree has been translated by an anonymous translator. “We know who it is and we think we can work something out with the Booker,” Azar says. “The translator felt it was dangerous to put their real name on the cover. It was risky as they are American and they like to go to Iran.”

The other writers on the Booker International Prize longlist are: Willem Anker, Gabriela Cabezon Camara, Jon Fosse, Nino Haratischvili, Michel Houellebecq, Daniel Kehlmann, Fernanda Melchor, Yoko Ogawa, Emmanuelle Pagano, Samanta Schweblin, Marieke Lucas Rijneveld and Enrique Vila-Matas. The winner will be announced August 26.

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