Anuk Arudpragasam’s novel The Story of a Brief Marriage has won
the Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize 2017.
A native of Colombo, his
work, according to shortlist judge Arshia Sattar, “presents the civil war in
Sri Lanka like never before. Writing from within the debris of Tamil lives in
prose that can pierce your heart, Arudpragasam’s protagonists find dignity as
they piece together strategies of survival. The story is about the human spirit
in the most desperate of times. It sings not as testament of glory but as a
dirge of despair.
Judges Kamila Shamsie, Rohini
Mohan and Margaret Mascarenhas were unanimous in their decision.
“Anuk Arudpragasam has written an
extraordinary novel that is timely, timeless and universal in its depiction of
the possibility of tenderness and love blossoming in the midst of the
mind-numbing carnage, suffering and horror that is war. The Story of a
Brief Marriage is mesmerizing from the first paragraph, and remains delicately
poised between life and death from beginning to end,” said Mascarenhas.
Shamsie added, ‘It’s an exceptional accomplishment for
any writer - for a debut writer it’s near miraculous.”
Mohan, winner of the Shakti
Bhatt First Book Prize 2015, for her own Sri Lanka-based novel The Seasons of Trouble said, “Anuk has taken what is actually a sliver
of a story, the briefest of moments, and suffused it with meaning. His spare,
meditative writing lets the pain and delirium of conflict unfold, sometimes
just through an injured bird.”
Author and translator Sattar
and poet and novelist Jeet Thayil chose this year's Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize
shortlist from forty-seven titles submitted for consideration.