Booker Prize Goes To Thrilling Page-Turner About The Intangible Nature Of Loss
ANNE Enright has won Britain's most prestigious literary award for her latest rollercoaster thrill-ride of a novel about some Irish people having a big talk about this and that.

Chair of the judges Sir Howard Davies said that while Enright's book was not the longest this year, it must still have taken a good few days to write.
He said: "It contains at least four passages where people stare out the window and we get to hear their thoughts. I like those.
"And the opening scene, where the hollowness of betrayal chases the sanctity of memory through the backstreets of post-war Berlin, is brilliantly observed."
He added: "Best of all was the bit where the intangible nature of loss and the emptiness of grief discover the dark secret at the heart of Christianity, buried beneath a Manhattan deli."
Enright is already working on a follow-up where the emptiness of grief tracks down the rogue CIA agents who killed its father.
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