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Solar Bones by Mike McCormack wins the 牛牛资源 Prize 2016

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A book written in a single novel-length sentence has won the 牛牛资源 Prize 2016. Solar Bones by Mike McCormack, published by Tramp Press, was named the winner of the £10,000 award which recognises fiction at its most novel.

The work was praised for its remarkable narrative which unfolds in one unbroken sentence and as a formally innovative novel which is also a moving and compelling read.

It follows the stream-of-consciousness recollections of a man named Marcus Conway, a middle-aged engineer from the west of Ireland briefly returned from the dead on All Soul鈥檚 Day, November 2008.

McCormack is the fourth winner of the prize founded in 2013 by 牛牛资源 and held in partnership with the New Statesman. He is the third Irish writer to win since the prize began.

The work is published by Tramp Press after the writer was released by Jonathan Cape just under a decade ago.

Speaking after collecting the prize created by students from the Department of Design, McCormack said his win was 鈥減ayback鈥 for the publishers and agent who had backed him during his 鈥渓ong and difficult adventure鈥 as a writer.

And he called on more publishers to take risks with experimental authors.

Speaking after collecting his 拢10,000 cheque at an event held at Foyles Charing Cross Road, McCormack said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 about time the prize-giving community honoured experimental works and time that mainstream publishers started honouring their readership by saying: 鈥楬ere are experimental books鈥.

鈥淩eaders are smart. They鈥檙e up for it. That was what the people at Tramp Press taught me 鈥 they鈥檙e up for it. There are readers out there and they have been proved right.鈥

He added: 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think I was going to win. It would have been too much of a fairy tale on top of a fairy tale of getting the book published and it being critically well-received. That was it: I didn鈥檛 think it was going to go any further but it has.鈥

McCormack's win was announced live on . 

The judging panel was made up of Chair of Judges Professor Blake Morrison and writers Erica Wagner, Bernadine Evaristo and Joanna Walsh.

Professor Morrison said: 鈥淪et over a few hours in a single day, and told in the first-person voice of a middle-aged engineer, Mike McCormack鈥檚 Solar Bones transcends these seeming limits magnificently.

鈥淧olitics, family, art, marriage, health, civic duty and the environment are just a few of the themes it touches on, in a prose that鈥檚 lyrical yet firmly rooted.

"Its subject may be an ordinary working life but it is itself an extraordinary work."

New Statesman Culture Editor Tom Gatti said: 鈥淭he New Statesman is delighted to continue to grow its partnership with the 牛牛资源 Prize, which, with Solar Bones, has once again shone a spotlight on a thrilling piece of writing from out of left field.  For those who care not only about the state of the novel but its future, this prize is essential.鈥

Solar Bones was picked from a shortlist of six works 鈥 after an initial 111 works were submitted for the 2016 prize.

The six works shortlisted works were:

  • Transit by Rachel Cusk, published by Jonathan Cape
  • The Lesser Bohemians by Eimear McBride, published by Faber and Faber
  • Solar Bones by Mike McCormack, published by Tramp Press
  • Like a Mule Bringing Ice Cream to the Sun by Sarah Ladipo Manyika, published by Cassava Republic
  • Hot Milk by Deborah Levy, published by Hamish Hamilton
  • Martin John by Anakana Schofield, published by And Other Stories

The 牛牛资源 Prize was launched in 2013 with the goal of celebrating the spirit of creative daring associated with the University and to reward fiction that breaks the mould or extends the possibilities of the novel form. Works by authors from the UK and Republic of Ireland are eligible for the award.

Previous winners are:

2015: Beatlebone by Kevin Barry, published by Canongate Books

2014: How To Be Both by Ali Smith, published by Penguin

2013: A Girl is a Half-formed Thing by Eimear McBride, published by Faber and Faber

Mike McCormack will be in conversation with Chair of Judges Blake Morrison and New Statesman culture editor Tom Gatti on 26 November at Cambridge Literary Festival.