Here's some good news!
From LitHub:
John le Carré, perhaps history’s greatest spy novelist, is the latest recipient of the $100,000 Olof Palme Prize, an award
given for “an outstanding achievement in any of the areas of
anti-racism, human rights, international understanding, peace and common
security.”
In their citation, the prize organizers praised le Carré “for his
engaging and humanistic opinion-making in literary form regarding the
freedom of the individual and the fundamental issues of mankind,” and
called his career “an extraordinary contribution to the necessary fight
for freedom, democracy and social justice.”
Le Carré—whose has penned some of the most iconic works of spy fiction of the last half-century, including Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, and The Night Manager—usually
steers clear of the awards circuit and even turned down a Man Booker
International Prize nomination in 2011, saying that while he was
“enormously flattered,” he did not compete for literary prizes. On this
occasion, however, le Carré has made an exception, while also stating
that he will donate the sizable winnings to the international
humanitarian NGO Médecins Sans Frontières. (Doctors without Borders)
The Olof Palme Prize itself honors the spirit of Swedish prime
minister and revolutionary reformist Palme, who was gunned down on on a
Stockholm street while walking back from the cinema with his wife in
1986.
That shows class.
ReplyDelete