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Press Contact: Ellen Ryder, 212/226-6563
ellen@ellenrydercommunications.com
2004 KIRIYAMA PRIZE WINNERS ANNOUNCED
Fiction winner Shan Sa’s novel
is first of her acclaimed works
published in English; Nonfiction winner Inga Clendinnen is first Australian
to share in US $30K Prize
SAN FRANCISCO (March 23, 2004) – The
8th annual Kiriyama Prize was awarded today to novelist Shan
Sa, the 32-year-old author of The Girl Who Played
Go (Chatto and Windus, UK; Alfred A. Knopf, USA);
and to historian Inga Clendinnen for her book exploring
the first years of European settlement in New South Wales, Dancing
with Strangers (Text Publishing, Australia).
The two authors will share equally the US
$30,000 cash award, presented by Pacific Rim Voices, the
independent nonprofit organization dedicated to celebrating
literature that contributes to greater understanding and
cooperation among the peoples and nations of the Pacific
Rim and South Asia.
The Girl Who Played Go: Shan
Sa’s novel – the first of her books to
be translated into English – is set against the brutal
backdrop of war-torn Manchuria in the 1930s. It chronicles
the story of a spirited 16-year-old Chinese girl and a
Japanese soldier in disguise. Their paths cross in the
occupied town square over a game of Go, the ancient Chinese
board game that requires artful strategy and skill. As
the game’s complexities are revealed, so are the
characters’ motivations – and their surprising
fates.
Shan Sa was born in 1972 in Beijing. In
1990 she left China for France, where she studied in Paris
and worked for two years with the painter Balthus. Her two
previous novels were awarded the Prix Goncourt du Premier
Roman and the Prix Cazes. The Girl Who Played
Go (translated by Adriana Hunter) is also available
in 19 other languages, and is being adapted for film.
[A review of The Girl Who Played Go and
a conversation with the Kiriyama Prize judges are published
in WaterBridge Review www.waterbridgereview.org,
a free online newsletter sponsored by Pacific Rim Voices.]
Dancing with Strangers: The
title of Inga Clendinnen’s book is a metaphor
for the initial contact in the late 18th century between
two vastly different peoples: the British settlers and Aboriginal
Australians. (“The Australians and the British began
their relationship,” Dr. Clendinnen writes, “by
dancing together.”) The centerpiece of this immensely
readable book is the vivid recreation of the events surrounding
the spearing of Governor Phillip at Manly Cove in 1790.
By retracing the difficulties in the way of understanding
people of different cultures, the author’s stated
hope is for greater tolerance and social justice.
Inga Clendinnen is also the author of Reading
the Holocaust, a New York Times Best Book of
the Year in 1999, and winner of the New South Wales Premier’s
General History Award. Her 1999 Australian Broadcasting
Corporation Boyer Lectures, True Stories, were published
in 2000, as was her award-winning memoir Tiger’s
Eye. She lectured for many years in the La Trobe University
History Department, Melbourne, and now lives in Townsville,
Australia.
[For a review of Dancing with Strangers and
a conversation with the Kiriyama Prize judges, visit WaterBridge
Review www.waterbridgereview.org,
a free online newsletter sponsored by Pacific Rim Voices.]
The 2004 Kiriyama Prize fiction finalists
included Brick Lane by Monica Ali (Random House,
Australia; Transworld Publishers/Doubleday, UK; Simon & Schuster/Scribner,
USA); My Life as a Fake by Peter Carey (Random House,
Australia; Faber & Faber, UK; Alfred A. Knopf, USA); The
Great Fire by Shirley Hazzard (Virago/Little Brown,
UK; Farrar, Straus & Giroux, USA); The Guru of Love by
Samrat Upadhyay (Houghton Mifflin Company, USA).
This year’s nonfiction finalists were White
Mughals: Love and Betrayal in Eighteenth Century India by
William Dalrymple (Penguin Books, India; HarperCollins,
UK; Viking, USA); Out of God's Oven: Travels in a Fractured
Land by Dom Moraes and Sarayu Srivatsa (Penguin Books,
India); Secrets and Spies: The Harbin Files by Mara
Moustafine (Random House, Australia); and Kamikaze,
Cherry Blossoms, and Nationalisms: The Militarization of
Aesthetics in Japanese History by Emiko Ohnuki-Tierny
(University of Chicago Press).
Also today, Peter J. Coughlan, administrator
of the Prize, announced the 2004 Kiriyama Prize Notable
List of 45 titles. The list of 20 fiction and 25 nonfiction
books comprise a contemporary bibliography of importance
to readers, librarians and educators. [The complete list
can be found at www.kiriyamaprize.org]
*
The Kiriyama Prize is awarded annually 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, New Zealand,
the United States, and the Pacific-bordering nations of
Latin America) and of the South Asian subcontinent. Authors
from anywhere in the world are eligible, provided that their
work is written in English or translated into English, and
that it relates to the nations of the Pacific Rim or South
Asia in a significant way.
Past finalists and winners include Sherman
Alexie, Cheng Ch’ing-wen, Carlos Fuentes, Patricia
Grace, Ha Jin, Rohinton Mistry, Michael Ondaatje, Ruth L.
Ozeki, Elena Poniatowska, Kerri Sakamoto, Pascal Khoo Thwe,
Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Simon Winchester, and Tim Winton.
Along with the Kiriyama Prize, Pacific Rim
Voices (www.pacificrimvoices.org)
continues to develop a family of projects celebrating literature
from and about the Pacific Rim and South Asia:
- Interviews with authors and critics, capsule
reviews, and a roundup of relevant news and events are
all featured in the free newsletter WaterBridge Review www.waterbridgereview.org available
online and by email upon request.
- Recognizing the importance of nurturing
among young people an appreciation and respect for other
cultures, Pacific Rim Voices also sponsors www.PaperTigers.org,
a website offering a lively, colorful presentation of children’s
and young adults’ books and featuring reviews, interviews,
and a virtual gallery of picture book illustrations.
For more information about the 2004 Kiriyama
Prize Winners, Finalists, and Notable List, visit www.kiriyamaprize.org or
call Jeannine Cuevas, Prize Manager
at (415) 777-1628.
# # #
NOTE TO EDITORS: Photographs of Shan
Sa and Inga Clendinnen are available upon request. Please
contact Ellen Ryder at 212/226-6563 or at ellen@ellenrydercommunications.com
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