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Irish Writer Paul Lynch Wins Booker Prize With Dystopian Novel 'Prophet Song'

Irish writer Paul Lynch won the Booker Prize on Sunday for his novel about a woman’s struggle to protect her family as Ireland collapses into totalitarianism and war.

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Irish writer Paul Lynch
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Irish author Paul Lynch won the 2023 Booker Prize on Sunday for his novel 'Prophet Song', a narrative of a family and a country on the brink of catastrophe as an imaginary Irish government veers towards tyranny.

Lynch, in his fifth novel, aims to show the unrest in Western democracies and their indifference towards disasters such as the implosion of Syria.

"From that first knock at the door, 'Prophet Song' forces us out of our complacency as we follow the terrifying plight of a woman seeking to protect her family in an Ireland descending into totalitarianism," Esi Edugyan, chair of the Booker's 2023 judges, said.

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"This is a triumph of emotional storytelling, bracing and brave."

Formerly the chief film critic for Ireland’s Sunday Tribune newspaper, Lynch expressed his desire to make readers understand totalitarianism by heightening the dystopia with the intense realism of his writing.

"I wanted to deepen the reader's immersion to such a degree that by the end of the book, they would not just know but feel this problem for themselves," he said in comments published on the Booker Prize website.

Moreover, he became the fifth Irish author to win the Booker Prize, after Iris Murdoch, John Banville, Roddy Doyle and Anne Enright, the organisers of the competition said. The Northern Irish writer Anna Burns won in 2018.

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Past winners of the Booker, which was first awarded in 1969, include Margaret Atwood, Salman Rushdie and Yann Martel.

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