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Turkish Novelist Up For British Prize

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  • Turkish Novelist Up For British Prize

    TURKISH NOVELIST UP FOR BRITISH PRIZE

    Reuters
    New York Times
    March 18 2008

    LONDON (Reuters) - A writer whose novel put her on trial for "insulting
    Turkishness" made the longlist for a prestigious British fiction
    prize on Tuesday.

    Elif Shafak, author of the bestseller "The Bastard of Istanbul" was one
    of 20 writers longlisted for the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction.

    Ms. Shafak was prosecuted in Turkey over comments made by characters
    in her book about the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

    She was acquitted by an Istanbul court in 2006.

    The book interweaves stories of a Turkish and an Armenian family in
    the United States and Istanbul.

    The Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and other Turkish intellectuals
    have been prosecuted for the same offense.

    In January of 2007, Ms. Shafak cut short a book tour promoting the
    novel in the United States because of fears for her safety after
    the murder of Hrant Dink, a newspaper editor who was prosecuted
    for challenging the official Turkish version of the 1915 Armenian
    genocide, her publisher said. She was attacked on nationalist Web
    sites the publisher, Paul Slovak, of Viking, said at the time. Ms.

    Shafak was born in France and is of Turkish descent.

    The Orange Prize is open to any woman writing in English.

    The novel is one of several in this year's longlist to deal with
    immigration.

    The winner will be announced at a ceremony on June 4.
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