Published in the US by W.W. Norton, Manu
Joseph's debut novel SERIOUS MEN has won the 2011 PEN Open Book Award.
The runner up was John Murillo with UP JUMP THE BOOGIE. Please click here for a list of all PEN prizes and their 2011 winners.
Manu
Joseph will be appearing at the Edinburgh Book Festival this year, and
SERIOUS MEN is also up for the Newton First Book Award, for which readers can vote here. Manu's event at the Festival will take place on Thursday 25 August (7-8:15pm). Please click here for more information on the event and here for more information about the author.
Manu
Joseph's debut has already won the Hindu Best Fiction Award 2010 and
been shortlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize, the Commonwealth
Prize, and the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize.
SERIOUS MEN is
published in the UK by John Murray, by Harpercollins in Canada and
India, and has been sold in Brazil (Record), Denmark (Thaning &
Appel), Germany (Klett Cotta & Suhrkamp), Holland (Podium), Italy
(Edizioni Dedalo), Serbia (Laguna), and Spain (El Aleph). It will also
be published in Tamil by Ethir Veliyedu in India.
PRAISE for Manu Joseph
'One
of the strongest debuts of 2010, this bittersweet Mumbai tale of high
minds and low plots [is] more LUCKY JIM than WHITE TIGER…Touching,
hilarious, this collision between the Mumbai of stars and of mud
rediscovers a deep Indian vein of humane and sophisticated comedy.' -- Independent
'Manu
Joseph shows how petty jealousies in India can motivate and divide as
surely as major societal differences. His skills as a writer are
tremendous - he invests even the most ordinary interactions with keenly
observed human quirks, and almost every sentence is a joy to read for
its ingeniously constructed language. This is a compellingly
entertaining novel - witty, subversive, extraordinarily perceptive,
deliciously wicked.' -- Manil Suri, author of THE DEATH OF VISHNU
'Arguably the best of the recent crop of novels by Indian writers.' -- Anis Shivani, Huffington Post
'The
finest comic novelists know that a small world can illuminate a culture
and an age. With this funny-sad debut, Joseph does just that for
surging, fractious India.' -- Boyd Tonkin, Independent
'Manu
Joseph's satirical tale of an ostensibly new India still in thrall to
its caste-ridden and sexist traditions is so much more than a mere comic
caper.' -- Catherine Taylor, The Guardian
'Manu
Joseph's first novel elegantly describes collisions with an unyielding
status quo, ably counterpointing the frustrations of the powerless with
the unfulfilling realities of power. With this astute comedy of manners
he makes a convincing bid for his own recognition as a novelist of
serious talent, the latest addition to a roster of Indian writers who
are creating fine literary art from their country's fearsome
contradictions.' -- Peter Carty, Independent