German author Jenny Erpenbeck and translator Michael Hofmann have received the Worldwide Booker Prize.
Their novel Kairos follows the damaging love affair between a 19-year-old scholar and a married man in his 50s who meet on a bus in East Berlin round 1986.
Their relationship involves embody the German Democratic Republic’s “crushed idealism” and eventual “dissolution of a complete political system”.
They’ll cut up the £50,000 prize.
Judges selected Kairos from a shortlist of six books and praised the “luminous prose” and wealthy high quality of the interpretation.
“It begins with love and keenness, however it’s at the least as a lot about energy, artwork and tradition,” chair of judges Eleanor Wachtel mentioned.
“The self-absorption of the lovers, their descent right into a damaging vortex, stays related to the bigger historical past of East Germany throughout this era, typically assembly historical past at odd angles.”
Final 12 months’s winner, Time Shelter by Bulgarian writer Georgi Gospodinov and translated by Angela Rodel, was additionally set throughout and after the autumn of the Iron Curtain.
Erpenbeck, 57, was born in Berlin and used to work as an opera director earlier than turning into an award-winning novelist. Her works embrace The Finish of Days (2014) and Go, Went, Gone (2017) which was longlisted in 2018.
Hofmann, 66, has been referred to as “arguably the world’s most influential translator, exterior of German into English”. Together with poetry and literary criticism, he teaches part-time on the College of Florida.