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6:40am Monday 12th May 2008
Salman Rushdie's novel Midnight's Children has been installed as favourite to win the Best of the Booker prize after being shortlisted for the award.
Six books are in the running for the prize, chosen from the 41 Booker winners over the years.
The award will celebrate this year's 40th anniversary of the Booker Prize, which launched in 1969.
A win for Rushdie will be a treble for the acclaimed author, who won the Booker for Midnight's Children, his second novel, in 1981. He won the Booker of Bookers - the only other time a celebratory award has been created for the prize - for Midnight's Children in 1993.
The most recent book on the shortlist is Disgrace, which won the Booker in 1999, by South African-born author JM Coetzee.
Bookies have made Coetzee, who emigrated to Australia in 2002 and was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 2003, second favourite to win.
The oldest novel is The Siege of Krishnapur, which won the Booker in 1973, by the late Liverpool-born author JG Farrell. The Ghost Road, by Yorkshire-born author Pat Barker, a winner in 1995, has also been shortlisted.
Australian author Peter Carey is in the running for Oscar and Lucinda (1988), which gave him the first of his two Booker prize wins. South African author Nadine Gordimer is shortlisted for The Conservationist (1974).
Bookies immediately installed Midnight's Children to take the prize, which will be voted for by the public. The overall winner will be announced as part of the London Literature Festival at the Southbank Centre on July 10.
The shortlist was selected by a panel of judges comprising biographer, novelist and critic Victoria Glendinning, writer and broadcaster Mariella Frostrup, and John Mullan, Professor of English at University College London.
THE Music Pool, Hereford’s community music charity, is hosting a special public event aimed at anyone wanting to discover the pleasure of singing – a day of singing exercises, games, harmony singing and songs from around the world will be led by nationally acclaimed Sue Hollingworth of the Voices Foundation.
A VISIT by the creator of Inspector Morse, Colin Dexter, will be one of the highlights of the 2008 Leominster Festival, which runs from Friday, May 30, to Sunday, June 8, and this year promises something for everyone.
THE internationally renowned identical twin sisters Antoinette and Claire Cann will be performing a sparkling programme of piano duets at St John the Baptist Church, Aymestrey, near Leominster on Saturday, May 24, at 7.30pm. Antoinette and Claire first played the piano when they were three years old, picking out tunes on the family piano. “The first thing we picked out was the theme to Listen with Mother.” Starting lessons was apparently the only time the pair were at odds about their playing. “Toni was very keen to go,” says Claire. “But at the time, Claire was shy,” adds Antoinette.
A LOCAL football team that played in a premiership stadium and an orchestra that appeared in an early TV broadcast are tall claims for a small Herefordshire village – but Fownhope has proof.
THE 21st Hay Literary Festival starts on May 22 and booking has opened for an exciting fortnight...
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