海角大神

Librarians select the world's best new novels

The IMPAC Dublin Award asks library systems from various countries to nominate the best new works of fiction.

'Absolution' and 'Questions of Travel' are two of the novels that made the shortlist for the IMPAC Dublin Award.

April 10, 2014

How do you find the world鈥檚 best novel?

Ask librarians 鈥 in 39 countries around the world.

That鈥檚 the essence behind the , a Dublin-based literary award that seeks to find the best new works of fiction from around the globe.

The pandemic divided the US. Could a full accounting help the nation heal?

An initiative of the Dublin City Council, the project asks 110 library systems from 39 countries around the world to nominate best new works of fiction. The prize: 鈧100,000 (around $138,000) and, of course, a good helping of prestige and attention.

The list has been whittled down to 10 finalists, about half of which are books translated from another language. The winner will be announced on June 12, but from our perspective, we already have our prize 鈥 a superlative roundup of some of the world鈥檚 best titles culled from experts (a.k.a. librarians) around the globe, ripe for the reading.

鈥淭his is a list of high quality literature that includes five novels in translation 鈥 that is the beauty of this award 鈥 readers around the world will find authors both familiar and new on what is a truly international shortlist,鈥 Dublin's Deputy Lord Mayor Councilor Henry Upton, said in an .

The shortlist includes five novels in translation, from Argentina, Colombia, France, Norway, and the Netherlands. Also on the list are English-language titles from the US, Australia, Ireland, and Malaysia.

鈥淭his is a truly global shortlist," said Dublin city librarian Margaret Hayes, "stories imagined and inspired by authors and themes from countries as far apart as Australia and Malaysia, on the one side of the globe, and Argentina, Colombia and the USA on the other, with an eclectic selection of European titles in the middle.鈥

Where did your shrimp dinner really come from? This reporter surfaces hard details.

Consider the , below, a list of guaranteed good reads perfect for evenings of literary globe-trotting:

(Dutch), translated by David Colmer

(Sri Lankan / Australian)

(American)

(Norwegian), translated by Don Bartlett

(French), translated by John Fletcher

(Argentinian), translated from the original Spanish by Nick Caistor and Lorenza Garcia

(Northern Irish)

(Irish)

(Malaysian)

(Colombian), translated from the original Spanish by Anne McLean

Husna Haq is a Monitor correspondent.