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October 29,
2002
2002 KIRIYAMA PRIZE WINNERS ANNOUNCED
Rohinton Mistry and Pascal Khoo Thwe To Share US$30,000
Award Honoring Fiction and Nonfiction Work
SAN FRANCISCO - The 7th annual Kiriyama Prize was
awarded today to acclaimed Canadian writer Rohinton Mistry,
for his third novel, Family Matters (Canada: McClelland
& Stewart; UK: Faber & Faber; US: Knopf;) and to
Pascal Khoo Thwe, a 35-year-old Burmese immigrant
to London, for his memoir, From the Land of Green Ghosts:
A Burmese Odyssey (UK and US: HarperCollins).
In addition to announcing this years winners, Peter
J. Coughlan, administrator of the Prize, made known today
the 2002 Kiriyama Prize Notable List of 47 titles.
The list of 22 fiction and 25 nonfiction books comprise
a contemporary bibliography of importance to readers, librarians
and educators. (The complete list can be found at http://www.kiriyamaprize.org)
Following his acclaimed novels Such a Long Journey
(1991) and A Fine Balance (1995), Bombay native Rohinton
Mistry offers in Family Matters a third masterly
novel and establishes himself as one of the outstanding
writers of English today. At the center of the novel
set in modern Bombay is Nariman Vakeel, the patriarch
of a small and discordant Parsi family, who is suffering
from Parkinsons disease. A fall, in which he breaks
his ankle, throws him upon the mercy of his family, a situation
that Nariman wryly likens to that of King Lear. The resulting
family tensions are explored with humor and tenderness.
Mistrys skill is such that in a two-room apartment
he finds and reveals a world of meaning. This is a warm,
wise, and beautifully paced novel in which humor and compassion
help us all make sense of the world in which we live. Commenting
on the Prize Winner, David Kipen, book critic for the San
Francisco Chronicle and one of this years fiction
judges, writes, Rohinton Mistry interweaves the sudden
and the gradual with a syncopation that few will fail to
recognize as the very rhythm of human life.
The autobiographical account offered by Pascal Khoo Thwe
in his first book, From the Land of Green Ghosts,
is the story of a young mans upbringing in a remote
Burmese village as a member of the Padaung hill tribe, and
of his subsequent journey from his strife-torn country through
Thailand and Europe. The first member of his community ever
to study English at Mandalay University, he was driven into
the jungle by the regimes oppression and became a
guerilla fighter. A letter sent to him by John Casey, a
Cambridge don he had earlier met in Mandalay, not only reached
the other side of the world, but resulted in the author
being rescued from the jungle and enrolling to study English
at Cambridge University. Hauntingly and poetically written,
this book recounts Pascal Khoo Thwes journey to freedom
despite almost unimaginable odds.
In his introduction, Casey describes the book as an
astonishing, thrilling and true story. In his review
for the Kiriyama Prize website, James Rosenthal, a former
U.S. Ambassador and Chair of this years nonfiction
panel, describes it as
first and foremost an
exciting adventure story, a true personal odyssey.
But it is much more. It is also a masterly commentary on
Burma itself its beauty and history, its spiritual
and ethnic diversity, its current political agony.
The 2002 Kiriyama Prize fiction shortlist included
Red Poppies by Alai, translated by Howard Goldblatt
and Sylvia Li-chun Lin (Australia: Penguin Books; US: Houghton
Mifflin; UK: Methuen); Melal: A Novel of the Pacific
by Robert Barclay (US: The University of Hawai'i Press);
The Girl From the Coast by Pramoedya Ananta Toer,
translated by Willem Samuels (US: Hyperion East); and Dirt
Music by Tim Winton (Australia and UK: Pan Macmillan;
US: Scribner/Simon & Schuster).
This years nonfiction shortlist included Singing
to the Dead: A Missioners Life among Refugees from
Burma by Victoria Armour-Hileman (US: University of
Georgia Press); Korean Endgame: A Strategy for Reunification
and U.S. Disengagement by Selig S. Harrison (US: Princeton
University Press); Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World,
1852-1912 by Donald Keene (US: Columbia University Press)
and The Good Women of China: Hidden Voices by Xinran,
translated by Esther Tyldesley (UK: Chatto & Windus;
Canada: Random House; US: Pantheon).
The Kiriyama Prize is awarded in recognition of outstanding
books that promote greater understanding of and among the
nations of the Pacific Rim (East and Southeast Asia, Australia,
Pacific Islands, Canada, Mexico, the United States, and
the Pacific-bordering nations of Latin America) and of the
South Asian subcontinent. Books from anywhere in the world
are eligible, provided they are written or translated into
English, and relate to the nations of the Pacific Rim or
South Asia in a significant way.
The Kiriyama Prize is a Pacific Rim Voices project. It
was established in 1996 as an annual award for a single
outstanding book that encouraged greater understanding among
the peoples and nations of the Pacific Rim. To acknowledge
the diversity and quantity of books entered for the Prize,
both a fiction and nonfiction winner have been awarded since
1999. Past winners have included Alan Brown (US), Cheng
Ching-wen (Taiwan), Patricia Grace (New Zealand),
Peter Hessler (US), Michael David Kwan (Canada), Michael
Ondaatje (Canada), Ruth L. Ozeki (US), and Andrew X. Pham
(US).
For more information about the 2002 Kiriyama
Prize Winners, Finalists, and Notable List, visit http://www.kiriyamaprize.org
or call Jeannine Cuevas, Prize Manager at 1 (415) 777-1628.
# # #
NOTE TO EDITORS: Photographs of Rohinton Mistry
and Pascal Khoo Thwe are available upon request. Please
contact the offices of the Kiriyama Prize at 1 (415) 777-1628
or email jeannine@kiriyamaprize.org.
# # #
Media Contacts
United Kingdom: Dotti Irving, ph: 44 (020) 7631-2666,
dotti@colmangettypr.co.uk
California, Oregon, Washington State (USA): Elizabeth
Whipple, ph: 1 (510) 232-2412, usapress@kiriyamaprize.org
United States (other states): Lydia Voles, ph: 1
(914) 941-0554, voleslepkow@earthlink.net
International and Hawai'i: Jeannine Cuevas, ph: 1
(415) 777-1628, jeannine@kiriyamaprize.org
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