Judges praise ‘searingly intimate’ debut, while Claire Fuller wins best novel and John Preston takes biography prize

Caleb Azumah Nelson was working part-time in the Apple Store in London when he decided to “take a gamble” on himself and try to write his first novel. On Tuesday evening, his debut, Open Water, was named winner of the Costa first novel award, praised by judges as “deeply moving, searingly intimate and just so now”.

Open Water follows the lives of two young Black British artists – he a photographer, she a dancer – as they start to fall in love after meeting in a south-east London pub. It beat titles including AK Blakemore’s The Manningtree Witches and Kate Sawyer’s The Stranding to win the £5,000 Costa prize. “We all loved this contemporary portrait of masculinity – it’s like nothing else we’ve ever read,” said judges.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Labour to delay publication of antisemitism inquiry findings

Exclusive: Findings on leaked report shelved indefinitely over concerns about prejudicing ICO…

Just Stop Oil activists who staged Silverstone protest convicted

Judge says protesters who ran on to track during British Grand Prix…

Why DC’s move to the small screen could be great

DC is aping Marvel’s move to TV, thanks to its superhero streaming…

Not the time for a ceasefire in Gaza, says US, with Hamas still holding hostages

Reports say US is pushing Israel to delay potential ground invasion, but…