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Russian Booker Prize

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(Redirected from Booker-Open Russia Prize)

Award
Russian Booker Prize
Awarded forBest Russian-language literary work
CountryRussia
Presented byRussian Telecom Equipment Company (RTEC)
First awarded1992
Last awarded2017
Websitehttp://www.russianbooker.org Edit this on Wikidata

The Russian Booker Prize (Russian: Русский Букер, Russian Booker) was a Russian literary award modeled after the Booker Prize. It was awarded from 1992 to 2017. It was inaugurated by English Chief Executive Sir Michael Harris Caine. It was awarded each year to the best work of fiction, written in the Russian language, as decided by a panel of judges, irrespective of the writer's citizenship. From 2003 to 2011 the chairman of the Russian Booker Prize Committee was British journalist George Walden. In 2012 David Gowan has been appointed to this position.

The prize was the first Russian non-governmental literary award since the country's 1917 Revolution.

Each year, a jury choose a short list of the six best novels up for nomination from a "long list" of nominees. Initially, the winner received £10,000, roughly 48,000 RUB or $16,000. This was increased to 600,000 rubles in 2011, roughly $20,000 (roughly £13,000), while each of the short listed finalists earned $2,000 (roughly £1,300). The criteria for inclusion included literary effort, representativeness of the contemporary literary genres and the author's reputation as a writer. Length was not a criterion, as books with between 40 and 60 pages had been nominated. From 1997 to 2001, the award was renamed the Smirnoff–Booker Literary Prize, in honour of entrepreneur and Smirnoff founder Pyotr Smirnov. From 2002 to 2005, Open Russia NGO was the general sponsor of the Booker Literary Prize in Russia, leading to its name change to the Booker–Open Russia Literary Prize during that time. Before the announcement of the 2005 winner, the Booker Foundation decided to end its partnership with Open Russia after the foundation's chairman, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, was sentenced to nine years in prison for tax evasion. In 2005, the committee signed a five-year contract with London-based BP. In 2010, the prize ran into funding problems and preparations for the 2010 prize were suspended because no new sponsor could be found. Since 2011 new sponsor is Russian Telecom Equipment Company (RTEC).

In 2011, a "novel of the decade" was chosen due to lack of sponsorship to hold the customary award. Five finalists were chosen from sixty nominees selected from the prize's past winners and finalists since 2001. Chudakov won posthumously with A Gloom Is Cast Upon the Ancient Steps, which takes place in a fictional town in Kazakhstan and describes life under Stalinist Russia. Lyudmila Ulitskaya holds the record for most nominations (five, winning once), followed by Andrei Dmitriev (four, winning once) and Alexey Slapovsky (four, no wins). No person has won the award more than once.

On 19 September 2019 Foundation Board and the Аward committee of the Russian Booker Prize officially announced the termination of the award. However, the Russian Booker Fund was not closed, "leaving the opportunity for the renewal of the award".

Winners and nominees

1990s

  *   Winners

Year Author(s) Work Ref.(s)
1992 Mark Kharitonov* Lines of Fate
1992 Friedrich Gorenstein Place
1992 Aleksandr Ivanchenko Monogram
1992 Vladimir Makanin Manhole
1992 Lyudmila Petrushevskaya The Time Night
1992 Vladimir Sorokin Four Stout Hearts
1993 Vladimir Makanin* Baize-covered Table with Decanter
1993 Viktor Astafyev The Cursed and the Slain
1993 Oleg Ermakov Sign of the Beast
1993 Semyon Lipkin Notes of a Lodger
1993 Lyudmila Ulitskaya Sonechka
1994 Bulat Okudzhava* The Show is Over
1994 Peter Aleshkovsky Skunk: A Life
1994 Yury Buida Don Domino
1994 Igor Dolinyak Third World
1994 Mikhail Levitin Total Indecency
1994 Alexey Slapovsky The First Second Coming
1995 Georgi Vladimov* The General and His Army
1995 Oleg Pavlov A Barracks Tale
1995 Evgeny Fyodorov The Odyssey
1996 Andrey Sergeev* The Stamp Album
1996 Peter Aleshkovsky Vladimir Chigrintsev
1996 Viktor Astafyev The Will to be Alive
1996 Andrei Dmitriev Turn in the River
1996 Dmitrii Dobrodeev Back to the USSR
1996 Nina Gorlanova, Vyacheslav Bukur A Novel About Education
1997 Anatoly Azolsky* Cell
1997 Dmitri Lipskerov The Forty Years of Changzhoeh
1997 Yuri Maletsky I Love
1997 Olga Slavnikova A Dragonfly Enlarged to the Size of a Dog
1997 Lyudmila Ulitskaya Medea and Her Children
1997 Anton Utkin Round Dance
1998 Aleksandr Morozov* Strange Letters
1998 Irina Polyanskaya Passing of the Shadow
1998 Mikhail Prorokov Bga
1998 Alexey Slapovsky Questionnaire
1998 Alexandra Chistyakova Не много ли для одной (English title unknown)
1999 Mikhail Butov* Freedom
1999 Yury Buida The Prussian Bride
1999 Alexandra Vasilieva My Marusechka
1999 Leonid Girshovich The Prizelist
1999 Vladimir Makanin The Underground, or a Hero of Our Time
1999 Victoria Platova A Coast

2000s

  *   Winners

Year Author(s) Work Ref.(s)
2000 Mikhail Shishkin* The Conquest of Izmail
2000 Valery Zalotukha The Last Communist
2000 Nikolay Kononov The Funeral of a Grasshopper
2000 Marina Palei Lunch
2000 Alexey Slapovsky Money Day
2000 Svetlana Shenbrun Roses and Chrysanthemums
2001 Lyudmila Ulitskaya* The Kukotsky Case
2001 Anatoly Naiman Sir
2001 Sergey Nosov The Lady of History
2001 Tatyana Tolstaya Slynx
2001 Alan Cherchesov Wreath for the Grave of the Wind
2001 Alexander Chudakov A Gloom Is Cast Upon the Ancient Steps
2002 Oleg Pavlov* Karaganda Ninth-Day Requiem or The Story of the Last Days
2002 Dmitry Bortnikov Fritz Syndrome
2002 Sergei Gandlevsky <Illegible>
2002 Alexandr Melikhov The Love of Kinfolks Laid to Rest
2002 Vadim Mesyats Treatment by Electricity: Novel of 84 Fragments from the East and 74 Fragments from the West
2002 Vladimir Sorokin Ice
2003 Rubén Gallego* White on Black
2003 Natalia Galkina Renaud's Residence
2003 Leonid Zorin Jupiter
2003 Athanasius Mamedov Frau Scar
2003 Elena Chizhova Laura
2003 Leonid Yuzefovich Kazaroza
2004 Vasily Aksyonov* Voltairiens and Voltairiennes
2004 Oleg Zaionchkovsky Sergeyev and the Town
2004 Anatoly Kurchatkin The Sun was Shining
2004 Marta Petrova Shilkloper's Horn
2004 Lyudmila Petrushevskaya Number One or in the Gardens of other Opportunities
2004 Alexey Slapovsky Quality of Life
2005 Denis Gutsko* Without Way or Track
2005 Boris Evseev Little Romance
2005 Oleg Yermakov Canvas
2005 Anatoly Naiman Kablukov
2005 Roman Solntsev Bonanza
2005 Roman Solntsev Except for Lavrikov
2005 Elena Chizhova A Criminal
2006 Olga Slavnikova* 2017
2006 Zakhar Prilepin Sanka
2006 Dina Rubina On the Sunny Side of the Street
2006 Denis Sobolev Jerusalem
2006 Alan Cherchesov Villa Belle Letra
2006 Peter Aleshkovsky A Fish
2007 Aleksandr Ilichevsky* Matisse
2007 Andrei Dmitriev Bay of Joy
2007 Yuri Malecki The End of a Needle
2007 Igor Sakhnovsky The Man Who Knew Everything
2007 Aleks Tarn God Does Not Play With Dice
2007 Lyudmila Ulitskaya Daniel Stein, Translator
2008 Mikhail Elizarov* Librarian
2008 Vladimir Sharov Be as Little Children
2008 Ilya Boyashov Armada
2008 Elena Nekrasova Schukinsk and Other Places
2008 Galina Shchekina Grafomanka
2008 German Sadulaev Crack
2009 Elena Chizhova* The Time of Women
2009 Roman Senchin Eltyshevy
2009 Alexander Terekhov Stone Bridge
2009 Boris Khazanov Yesterday's Eternity
2009 Yelena Katishonok Once Upon a Time an Old Man and Old Woman
2009 Leonid Yuzefovich Cranes and Dwarfs

2010s

  *   Winners

Year Author(s) Work Ref.(s)
2010 Elena Kolyadina* The Flower Cross
2010 Oleg Zaionchkovsky Happiness is Possible
2010 Andrei Ivanov A Journey of Hanuman on Lolland
2010 Mariam Petrosyan The House, In Which...
2010 German Sadulaev Shali Raid
2010 Margarita Khemlin Klotsvog
2011 Alexander Chudakov* A Gloom Is Cast Upon the Ancient Steps
2011 Oleg Pavlov Karaganda Ninth-Day Requiem or The Story of the Last Days
2011 Zakhar Prilepin Sanka
2011 Roman Senchin Eltyshevy
2011 Lyudmila Ulitskaya Daniel Stein, Translator
2012 Andrei Dmitriev* The Peasant and the Teenager
2012 Marina Akhmedova Khadija, Notes of a Death Girl
2012 Yevgeni Popov Arbeit, Or A Wide Canvas
2012 Olga Slavnikova Light Head
2012 Marina Stepanova The Women of Lazarus
2012 Alexandr Terekhov The Germans
2013 Andrei Volos Возвращение в Панджруд ("Return to Panjrud")
2014 Vladimir Sharov Возвращение в Египет ("Return to Egypt")
2015 Alexander Snegirev Vera
2015 Alisa Ganieva Bride and Groom
2015 Vladimir Danikhov The Lullaby
2015 Yuri Pokrovsky Among People
2015 Roman Senchin Flood Zone
2015 Guzel Yakhina Zuleikha Opens Her Eyes
2016 Peter Aleshkovsky Крепость ("The Citadel")
2017 Aleksandra Nikolaenko Убить Бобрыкина. История одного убийства ("To Kill Bobrykin. The Story of One Killing")

Criticism

The Russian Booker was famous for unpredictable and paradoxical decisions that did not always attract the approval of Russian literary experts.

A number of writers expressed their fundamental rejection of the "Russian Booker". Already the first decision of the jury, as a result of which the award in 1992 was not received by the generally recognized favorite — the novel "The Time Night" by Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, met with almost unanimous disapproval. Vladimir Novikov (ru) in 2000, describing the very first Booker prize winner - the novel "Lines of fate, or the chest of Milashevich" by Mark Kharitonov as boring, stated: "From the very beginning, the Booker plot did not succeed, it was failed to nominate a leader through the award, which modern prose writers would passionately want to catch up and overtake. But it is precisely in this the cultural function, the cultural strategy of any literary prize" Elena Fanaylova noted in 2006: "The Russian Booker does not correspond to its English parent either from a moral or from a meaningful point of view (it can be compared with the translated version of the Booker already available in Russia). The prize focuses on literature that is not interesting either on the domestic or foreign market, or, if it is a convertible author (Ulitskaya, Aksenov), it is awarded not for 'novel of the year', but 'for merits'." Yuri Polyakov in 2008 pointed out that "people receive awards not for the quality of a literary text, not for some artistic discovery, not for the ability to reach the reader, but for loyalty to a certain party, mainly experimental-liberal direction. Almost all the books that were awarded with the prize, did not have any serious reader's fate, received the award and were immediately completely forgotten." Dmitry Bykov in 2010 noted the Booker jury's "amazing ability to choose the worst or, in any case, the least significant of six novels".

Literary critic Konstantin Trunin, describing the 2018 crisis of the award, noted: "For all the time of its existence, the prize did not justify itself, each year choosing the winner as a writer who created work that is far from understanding by Russian people of the reality surrounding him. There was a direct propaganda of Western values, not Russian ones. Or on the contrary, to the West was shown literature that was not destined to create a close resemblance to the works created in Russia during the 19th century. And it is not surprising that year after year, the Russian Booker lost its authority among the emerging awards. Being handed twenty-six times, he faced the rejection of sponsors, as a result of which it became necessary to reconsider the meaning of existence, having found the transformation required by the reader to a truly Russian humanistic value system».

References

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External links

Recipients of the Russian Booker Prize
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