Who will win the DSC Prize?

Peter Griffin
Updated: Jan 14, 2013 04:53:12 AM UTC

We're going to be at the Jaipur Literature Festival later this month. We'll be blogging and tweeting from there, and we hope to snag you some interviews as well. Let us know who you'd most like to hear from. Here's the schedule.

One of the events at the festival is the announcement of the winner of the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature, which, at US$ 50,000, is the richest literary prize in this part of the world. The jury — Ira Pande (chair), Dr. Alastair Niven, Dr. Fakrul Alam, Faiza S. Khan, Marie Brenner — short-listed six books: • U.R. Ananthamurthy for Bharathipura (Oxford University Press, India, translated by Susheela Punitha)
• Chandrakanta for A Street in Srinagar (Zubaan Books, India, translated by Manisha Chaudhry)
• Usha K.R for Monkey-man (Penguin/Penguin India)
• Shehan Karunatilaka for Chinaman (Random House, India)
• Tabish Khair for The Thing About Thugs (Fourth Estate / HarperCollins-India)
• Kavery Nambisan for The Story that Must Not Be Told (Viking / Penguin India)
(More about the books and authors here.)

Who would you wager on? Leave your votes in the comments.

The thoughts and opinions shared here are of the author.

Check out our end of season subscription discounts with a Moneycontrol pro subscription absolutely free. Use code EOSO2021. Click here for details.

Post Your Comment
Required
Required, will not be published
All comments are moderated