International Dublin Literary Award  

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-{{Template}}+{{Template}}The '''International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award''' is the largest and most international prize of its kind for a single work of fiction published in English. It is open to novels written in any language and by authors of any nationality, provided the work has been published in English or English translation. The Award is a joint initiative of the [[Dublin City Council]], the Municipal Government of [[Dublin]], [[Ireland]], and the productivity improvement company IMPAC. The prize is [[Euro|€]]100,000.
 + 
 +The award is administered by Dublin City Libraries who seek nominations from [[Public library|public libraries]] from major cities across the world.
 + 
 +__NOTOC__
 + 
 +<center>'''Year index''': [[#2006|2006]] &ndash; [[#2005|2005]] &ndash; [[#2004|2004]] &ndash; [[#2003|2003]] &ndash; [[#2002|2002]] &ndash; [[#2001|2001]] &ndash; [[#2000|2000]] &ndash; [[#1999|1999]] &ndash; [[#1998|1998]] &ndash; [[#1997|1997]] &ndash; [[#1996|1996]]</center>
 + 
 +==2007==
 +*Winner: [[Per Petterson]], ''[[Out Stealing Horses]]'' (translated from the Norwegian by Anne Born)
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:* [[Julian Barnes]], ''[[Arthur & George]]''
 +:* [[Sebastian Barry]], ''[[A Long Long Way]]''
 +:* [[J.M. Coetzee]], ''[[Slow Man]]''
 +:* [[Jonathan Safran Foer]], ''[[Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close]]''
 +:* [[Peter Hobbs]], ''The Short Day Dying''
 +:* [[Cormac McCarthy]], ''[[No Country for Old Men]]''
 +:* [[Salman Rushdie]], ''[[Shalimar the Clown]]''
 + 
 +==2006==
 +*Winner: [[Colm Tóibín]], ''[[The Master (novel)|The Master]]''
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:* [[Chris Abani]], ''GraceLand''
 +:* [[Nadeem Aslam]], ''[[Maps for Lost Lovers]]''
 +:* [[Ronan Bennett]], ''Havoc in Its Third Year''
 +:* [[Jonathan Coe]], ''[[The Closed Circle]]''
 +:* [[Jens Christian Grøndahl]], ''An Altered Light'' (translated from the Danish by Anne Born)
 +:* [[Vyvyane Loh]], ''Breaking the Tongue''
 +:* [[Margaret Mazzantini]], ''[[Don't Move]]'' (translated from the Italian by John Cullen)
 +:* [[Yasmina Khadra]], '' The Swallows of Kabul'' (translated from the French by John Cullen)
 +:* [[Thomas Wharton]], ''The Logogryph''
 + 
 +==2005==
 +*Winner: [[Edward P. Jones]], ''[[The Known World]]''
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:* [[Diane Awerbuck]], ''Gardening at Night''
 +:* [[Lars Saabye Christensen]], ''The Half Brother'' (translated from the Norwegian by Kenneth Steven)
 +:* [[Damon Galgut]], ''The Good Doctor''
 +:* [[Douglas Glover]], ''Elle''
 +:* [[Arnon Grunberg]], ''Phantom Pain'' (translated from the Dutch by Sam Garrett)
 +:* [[Shirley Hazzard]], ''The Great Fire''
 +:* [[Christoph Hein]], ''Willenbrock'' (translated from the German by Philip Boehm)
 +:* [[Frances Itani]], ''[[Deafening]]''
 +:* [[Jonathan Lethem]], ''[[The Fortress of Solitude]]''
 + 
 +==2004==
 +*Winner: [[Tahar Ben Jelloun]], ''This Blinding Absence of Light'' (translated from the French by Linda Coverdale)
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Paul Auster]], ''[[The Book of Illusions]]''
 +:*[[William Boyd (writer)|William Boyd]], ''[[Any Human Heart]]''
 +:*[[Sandra Cisneros]], ''[[Caramelo]]''
 +:*[[Jeffrey Eugenides]], ''[[Middlesex (novel)|Miiddlesex]]''
 +:*[[Maggie Gee]], ''[[The White Family]]''
 +:*[[Amin Maalouf]], ''[[Balthasar's Odyssey]]'' (translated from the French by Barbara Bray)
 +:*[[Rohinton Mistry]], ''[[Family Matters (novel)|Family Matters]]''
 +:*[[Atiq Rahimi]], ''Earth and Ashes'' (translated from the Dari by Erdag M. Göknar)
 +:*[[Olga Tokarczuk]], ''House of Day, House of Night'' (translated from the Polish by Antonia Lloyd-Jones)
 + 
 +==2003==
 +*Winner: [[Orhan Pamuk]], ''[[My Name is Red]]'' (Translated from the Turkish by Erdag Göknar)
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Dennis Bock]], ''The Ash Garden''
 +:*[[Achmat Dangor]], ''Bitter Fruit''
 +:*[[Per Olov Enquist]], ''The Royal Physician's Visit''
 +:*[[Jonathan Franzen]], ''[[The Corrections]]''
 +:*[[Lidia Jorge]], ''The Migrant Painter of Birds''
 +:*[[John McGahern]], ''That They May Face the Rising Sun''
 +:*[[Ann Patchett]], ''[[Bel Canto (novel)|Bel Canto]]''
 + 
 +==2002==
 +*Winner: [[Michel Houellebecq]], ''The Elementary Particles (Atomised)'' (translated from the French by [[Frank Wynne]])
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Peter Carey]], ''[[True History of the Kelly Gang]]''
 +:*[[Margaret Atwood]], ''[[The Blind Assassin]]''
 +:*[[Michael Collins (Irish author)|Michael Collins]], ''The Keepers of Truth''
 +:*[[Helen DeWitt]], ''The Last Samurai''
 +:*[[Carlos Fuentes]], ''The Years with Laura Diaz''
 +:*[[Antoni Libera]], ''Madame''
 + 
 +==2001==
 +*Winner: [[Alistair MacLeod]], ''[[No Great Mischief]]''
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Margaret Cezair-Thompson]], ''The True History of Paradise''
 +:*[[Silvia Molina]], ''The Love You Promised Me''
 +:*[[Andrew O'Hagan]], ''[[Our Fathers]]''
 +:*[[Victor Pelevin]], ''Buddha's Little Finger''
 +:*[[Colm Tóibín]], ''[[The Blackwater Lightship]]''
 + 
 +==2000==
 +*Winner: [[Nicola Barker]], ''Wide Open''
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Michael Cunningham]], ''[[The Hours (novel)|The Hours]]''
 +:*[[Jackie Kay]], ''Trumpet''
 +:*[[Colum McCann]], ''This Side of Brightness''
 +:*[[Alice McDermott]], ''Charming Billy''
 +:*[[Toni Morrison]], ''[[Paradise (novel)|Paradise]]''
 +:*[[Philip Roth]], ''[[I Married a Communist]]''
 + 
 +==1999==
 +*Winner: [[Andrew Miller (novelist)|Andrew Miller]], ''Ingenious Pain''
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Jim Crace]], ''[[Quarantine (Jim Crace novel)|Quarantine]]''
 +:*[[Don DeLillo]], ''[[Underworld (DeLillo novel)|Underworld]]''
 +:*[[Francisco Goldman]], ''The Ordinary Seaman''
 +:*[[Ian McEwan]], ''[[Enduring Love]]''
 +:*[[Haruki Murakami]], ''[[The Wind-up Bird Chronicle]]''
 +:*[[Cynthia Ozick]], ''[[The Puttermesser Papers]]''
 +:*[[Bernhard Schlink]], ''[[The Reader]]''
 + 
 +==1998==
 +*Winner: [[Herta Müller]], ''The Land of Green Plums'' (translated from the German by Michael Hofmann)
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Margaret Atwood]], ''[[Alias Grace]]''
 +:*[[Andre Brink]], ''Imaginings of Sand''
 +:*[[David Dabydeen]], ''The Counting House''
 +:*[[David Foster (author)|David Foster]], ''The Glade within the Grove''
 +:*[[Jamaica Kincaid]], ''Autobiography of my Mother''
 +:*[[Earl Lovelace]], ''Salt''
 +:*[[Lawrence Norfolk]], ''The Pope's Rhinoceros''
 +:*[[Graham Swift]], ''[[Last Orders]]''
 +:*[[Guy Vanderhaeghe]], ''[[The Englishman's Boy]]''
 + 
 +==1997==
 +*Winner: [[Javier Marias]], ''A Heart So White''
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[Sherman Alexie]], ''Reservation Blues''
 +:*[[Rohinton Mistry]], ''[[A Fine Balance]]''
 +:*[[Duong Thu]], ''Novel Without A Name''
 +:*[[Antonio Tabucchi]], ''Declares Pereira''
 +:*[[Lars Gustafsson]], ''A Tiler's Afternoon''
 +:*[[A. J. Verdelle]], ''The Good Negress''
 +:*[[Alan Warner (author)|Alan Warner]], ''[[Morvern Callar]]''
 + 
 +==1996==
 +*Winner: [[David Malouf]], ''[[Remembering Babylon]]''
 +:Others shortlisted:
 +:*[[John Banville]], ''Ghosts''
 +:*[[V. S. Naipaul]], ''[[A Way In The World]]''
 +:*[[Cees Nooteboom]], ''The Following Story''
 +:*[[Connie Palmen]], ''The Laws''
 +:*[[José Saramago]], ''[[The Gospel According to Jesus Christ]]''
 +:*[[Jane Urquhart]], ''Away''
 + 
 + 
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

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The International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award is the largest and most international prize of its kind for a single work of fiction published in English. It is open to novels written in any language and by authors of any nationality, provided the work has been published in English or English translation. The Award is a joint initiative of the Dublin City Council, the Municipal Government of Dublin, Ireland, and the productivity improvement company IMPAC. The prize is 100,000.

The award is administered by Dublin City Libraries who seek nominations from public libraries from major cities across the world.


Year index: 20062005200420032002200120001999199819971996

2007

Others shortlisted:

2006

Others shortlisted:

2005

Others shortlisted:

2004

  • Winner: Tahar Ben Jelloun, This Blinding Absence of Light (translated from the French by Linda Coverdale)
Others shortlisted:

2003

Others shortlisted:

2002

Others shortlisted:

2001

Others shortlisted:

2000

Others shortlisted:

1999

Others shortlisted:

1998

  • Winner: Herta Müller, The Land of Green Plums (translated from the German by Michael Hofmann)
Others shortlisted:

1997

Others shortlisted:

1996

Others shortlisted:





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "International Dublin Literary Award" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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