British author Samantha Harvey has become the first woman since 2019 to win the Booker Prize.
Her book Orbital, about astronauts looking down at Earth, was named as the winner of the £50,000 prize and trophy at a ceremony held at Old Billingsgate in the City of London.
Harvey, who was longlisted for the prestigious literary prize in 2009 for her debut novel The Wilderness, is the 19th woman to win since the first award in 1969. There have been 36 male winners.
The Queen was one of the first to send the author her congratulations, after meeting her earlier today – saying the novel was ‘brilliant’.
Harvey, from Bath, said she had ‘no idea how to deal with’ her win at the 2024 Booker Prize as she took to the stage following her victory.
She said she was ‘overwhelmed, vicariously’ when Irish author Paul Lynch, a friend of hers, won last year, and ‘can’t believe’ she is in the same position.
She said: ‘Gosh, I have no idea how to deal with this. I have not expected it. I’m completely overwhelmed.’
Samantha Harvey poses with the trophy after winning the Booker Prize award
Samantha Harvey reacts after winning the Booker Prize award at Old Billingsgate in the City of London
Samantha Harvey’s book Orbital, about astronauts looking down at Earth, was named as the winner of the £50,000 prize and trophy at a ceremony held at Old Billingsgate in the City of London
Harvey, who was longlisted for the prestigious literary prize in 2009 for her debut novel The Wilderness, is the 19th woman to win since the first award in 1969. Pictured: Talking with Queen Camilla earlier today
Harvey dedicated the prize to ‘everybody who does speak for, and not against the earth, for and not against the dignity of other humans, other life and all the people who speak for and call for and work for peace’.
‘I suppose it’s fair to say that no Booker speech has ever been made in a perfect world. It’s hard to not acknowledge the imperfections of the world that we live in today.’
Five years ago, the gong went jointly to two women, British author Bernardine Evaristo for Girl, Woman, Other and Canadian novelist Margaret Atwood for The Handmaid’s Tale sequel The Testaments.
It was last won by a British author when Glasgow-born Douglas Stuart was named the 2020 Booker Prize winner for Shuggie Bain.
Harvey joined the likes of Gillian Anderson, Charles Dance, Sara Pascoe, Sir Lenny Henry, Ruth Jones and TV historian David Olusoga at the star-studded ceremony.
Gaby Wood, chief executive of the Booker Prize Foundation, said: ‘Orbital wins the prize in a year of geopolitical crisis, likely to be the warmest year in recorded history.
‘A book about a planet ‘shaped by the sheer amazing force of human want’, about an ‘unbounded place’ with no wall or barrier visible from space, with all politics ‘an assault on its gentleness’, it is hopeful, timely and timeless.’
Speaking with The Guardian, she continued: ‘Zooming right out let me escape our web of concerns about our impact on each other and on the planet.’
Born in Kent, Harvey said that she had been watching the ISS live camera ‘for years’, and had become immersed in the beauty it showed.
Describing it as ‘space pastoral’, she said the characters are ‘just part of the image, not the lens’ – and her key hope was to ‘do justice in words to the beauty of the Earth and how I feel about the unnerving fact of its aloneness’.
This year, a record number of women were shortlisted for the Booker, with five nominated in total.
The best-selling book of the shortlist, with 29,000 copies sold in the UK this year, Orbital is also the second-shortest Booker winner, just behind Penelope Fitzgerald’s Offshore, which won the 1979 prize.
It has also won The InWords Literary Award 2024 and the 2024 Hawthornden Prize for Literature.
Samantha Harvey gives a speech after winning the Booker Prize award 2024
The Queen was one of the first to send the author her congratulations, after meeting her earlier today – saying the novel was ‘brilliant’
Harvey’s novel takes place over a 24-hour time frame, with 16 orbits around the Earth, and touches on the death of a loved one, a typhoon coming, and the fragility of human life
Yael van der Wouden, Rachel Kushner, Anne Michaels, Queen Camilla, Charlotte Wood, Percival Everett, and Samantha Harvey during a reception for the Booker Prize Foundation at Clarence House
Artist and chairman of the judges Edmund de Waal was asked about the optics if the one man on the list, Percival Everett, won for James, a powerful retelling of The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, from the perspective of the enslaved Jim.
Mr de Waal dismissed the suggestion, saying that ‘there was no question, that anyone could have won this, irrespective of their background, their gender, their ethnicity, whatever, absolutely anyone’.
‘There was absolutely no question of box ticking or of agendas or anything else in the room at all,’ he added.
‘It was simply about a novel.’
Harvey’s novel takes place over a 24-hour time frame, following six astronauts and cosmonauts on the International Space Station over 16 sunrises and 16 sunsets.
It touches on the death of a loved one, a typhoon coming, and the fragility of human life.
Harvey, a Reader in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University, where she herself went to university, previously told the BBC that she wrote the book between successive lockdowns.
She told Radio 4’s Front Row: ‘I was writing about six people trapped in a tin can. It felt like there was something resonant about that and our experience of lockdown, of not being able to escape each other and also not being able to get to other people.’
Mr de Waal said: ‘As judges, we were determined to find a book that moved us, a book that had capaciousness and resonance, that we are compelled to share.
‘We wanted everything. Orbital is our book.
Shortlisted books on display during a reception for The Booker Prize Foundation at Clarence House
‘Samantha Harvey has written a novel propelled by the beauty of 16 sunrises and 16 sunsets.
‘Everyone and no one is the subject, as six astronauts in the International Space Station circle the Earth observing the passages of weather across the fragility of borders and time zones.
‘With her language of lyricism and acuity, Harvey makes our world strange and new for us.
‘All year we have celebrated fiction that inhabits ideas rather than declaiming on issues, not finding answers but changing the question of what we wanted to explore.
‘Our unanimity about Orbital recognises its beauty and ambition.
‘It reflects Harvey’s extraordinary intensity of attention to the precious and precarious world we share.’
This year’s judges all agreed on the choice, and included novelist Sara Collins, The Guardian fiction editor Justine Jordan, Chinese-born professor and A Thousand Years Of Good Prayers writer Yiyun Li and musician, composer and producer Nitin Sawhney, who has collaborated with Sir Paul McCartney and won an Ivor Novello lifetime achievement gong.
Earlier on Tuesday, the shortlisted authors – Yael van der Wouden, Rachel Kushner, Anne Michaels, Charlotte Wood, Everett and Harvey – attended a reception with the Queen, her first public engagement since falling ill with a chest infection.
Last year’s winner was Irish author Paul Lynch with his dystopian novel Prophet Song.
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