Organizers of the International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF) have revealed the titles longlisted for the 2021 edition of the prize, which is worth USD $50,000.
The 2021 longlist includes 16 novels, which were selected by the judges from among 121 entries, all published in Arabic between 1st July 2019 and 31st August 2020.
The longlisted authors for this year’s edition of the prize range in age from 31 to 75. The longlisted novels tackle important contemporary issues facing the Arab world; such as suffering in Iraq, the spread of extremist organizations and the status of women in the Arab world. Crime novels also have a strong presence on this year’s list, with narratives exploring crimes committed against the backdrop of wars and conflicts in the region. Moreover, some of the longlisted novels explore other themes such as human relationships, loyalty, betrayal and the role of literature in enlightenment and are set across the Arabic world in cities from Aden and Amman to Casablanca, Oran and beyond.
It is worth mentioning that the longlist was selected by a panel of five judges chaired by Lebanese poet and author Chawki Bazih. Judging alongside Bazih are Safa Jubran, a lecturer of Arabic Language and Modern Literature at the University of San Paolo in Brazil, Mohammed Ait Hanna, a Moroccan writer, translator and teacher of Philosophy at the Regional Centre for Teaching Careers and Training in Casablanca; ; Ali Al-Muqri, a Yemeni writer twice longlisted for IPAF in 2009 and 2011 respectively; and Ayesha Sultan, an Emirati author, journalist, founding director of Warrak Publishing House and Vice President of the Emirates Writers Union.
Authors on the 2021 longlist who have been recognized by the International Prize for Arabic Fiction in previous years include Jalal Bargas (longlisted in 2019 for Women of the Five Senses), Muhsin Al-Ramli (longlisted in 2010 for Dates on my Fingers and again in 2013 for The President’s Garden), Habib Selmi (shortlisted in 2009 for The Scents of Marie-Claire and again in 2012 for The Women of al-Basatin), Youssef Fadel (shortlisted in 2014 for A Rare Blue Bird that Flies with Me), Mansoura Ezz Eldin (shortlisted in 2010 for Beyond Paradise) and Hamed Al-Nazir (longlisted in 2016 for The Prophecy of Saqqa and again in 2018 for The Black Peacock).
Authors who have been longlisted for the prize for the first time are Abdulatif Ould Abdullah, Abdullah Albsais, Abdulla Al Ayaf, Abbas Baydoun, Amira Ghenim, Amara Lakhous, Dunya Mikhail, Sara al-Nams, Abdelmeguid Sabata and Ahmed Zein.
The International Prize for Arabic Fiction is an annual literary prize for prose fiction in Arabic. It is sponsored by the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi and has been mentored by the Booker Prize Foundation in London.
Chawki Bazih, Chair of the 2021 Judges, said: ‘These 16 outstanding books from across the Arab world encompass a variety of styles and themes, from documentary-like narrative, to letters and ingenious use of the crime thriller genre, all penetrating the social and psychological fabric of Arab society.’
In addition, Professor Yasir Suleiman CBE, Chair of the Board of Trustees, said: ‘The longlist for this edition of the prize continues to excel in the range of themes, styles and narrative modes that have been witnessed in previous years. History, both recent and distant, is a feeder of ideas and perspectives that the novels in this cycle mine to unpack the past and illuminate the present. The novels’ stuttering transitions throughout history, multiple viewpoints vocalized, mysteries uncovered and attempted to resolve and the boundaries traversed all testify to the increasingly experimental nature of the Arabic novel as it stares at itself in times of fracture and intense self-examination.’