British writer Samantha Harvey has won the 2024 Booker Prize for her book Orbital.
“We were told that we were not allowed to swear in our speech, so there goes my speech. It’s just one swear word 150 times,” she said.
Orbital is set on an international space station, over the course of 24 hours, and describes the thoughts of six astronauts and cosmonauts. It is Harvey’s fifth novel. She has also written a non-fiction book about insomnia.
The prize was announced at a ceremony in Old Billingsgate in London on Wednesday morning AEDT. Australian author Charlotte Wood was among six authors on the shortlist.
Wood was shortlisted for her highly acclaimed Stone Yard Devotional, which traces a woman’s rejection of the modern world for a life of service, contemplation and devotion in a rural nunnery in NSW.
American Rachel Kushner was nominated for Creation Lake and fellow American Percival Everett for James - a reimagining of Mark Twain’s classic Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Also shortlisted were Canadian writer Anne Michaels for Held and Yael van der Wouden, the first Dutch author nominated, for her debut novel The Safekeep.
“It’s fair to say that no Booker speech has ever been made in a perfect world,” Harvey said on accepting the award, “but it’s hard to not acknowledge the imperfections of the world that we live in today.
“We are, as Carl Sagan says in his book Cosmos, ‘the local embodiment of a consciousness grown to self-awareness, we are star stuff pondering the stars’. And I would add we are earth stuff pondering the earth and I think my novel is an exercise in that pondering.