The News
Sunday 24 of November 2024

Kamila Shamsie's 'Home Fire' wins Women's Prize for Fiction


FILE - In this Wednesday June 3, 2009 file photo, author Kamila Shamsie poses for the photographers ahead of the announcement of the 2009 Orange Book prize for fiction, in London's Royal Festival Hall. British-Pakistani writer Kamila Shamsie has won the international Women's Prize for Fiction with
FILE - In this Wednesday June 3, 2009 file photo, author Kamila Shamsie poses for the photographers ahead of the announcement of the 2009 Orange Book prize for fiction, in London's Royal Festival Hall. British-Pakistani writer Kamila Shamsie has won the international Women's Prize for Fiction with "Home Fire," a novel about love, radicalism and conflicting loyalties in the post-9/11 era. Shamsie was awarded the 30,000 pound ($40,000) prize at a ceremony in London Wednesday, June 6, 2018. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, file),FILE - In this Wednesday June 3, 2009 file photo, author Kamila Shamsie poses for the photographers ahead of the announcement of the 2009 Orange Book prize for fiction, in London's Royal Festival Hall. British-Pakistani writer Kamila Shamsie has won the international Women's Prize for Fiction with "Home Fire," a novel about love, radicalism and conflicting loyalties in the post-9/11 era. Shamsie was awarded the 30,000 pound ($40,000) prize at a ceremony in London Wednesday, June 6, 2018. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, file)

LONDON (AP) — Pakistani-British writer Kamila Shamsie has won the international Women’s Prize for Fiction with “Home Fire,” a novel about love, radicalism and conflicting loyalties in the post-9/11 era.

Shamsie was awarded the 30,000 pound ($40,000) prize at a ceremony in London Wednesday. Loosely based on Sophocles’ ancient Greek tragedy “Antigone,” her novel centers on three British Muslim siblings torn apart when one joins the Islamic State group.

Journalist Sarah Sands, who chaired the judging panel, called it a story of “identity, conflicting loyalties, love and politics” that “spoke for our times.”

Shamsie beat five other finalists. They included American writer Jesmyn Ward, who had been bookies’ favorite for her National Book Award-winning novel “Sing, Unburied, Sing.”

Founded in 1996, the prestigious prize is open to female English-language writers from around the world.