Women's Prize
for Fiction 2023
for Fiction 2023
Women's Prize for Fiction 2023
Discover more about this year's prize.Winner of the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2023
'An exposé of modern America, its opioid crisis and the detrimental treatment of deprived and maligned communities, Demon Copperhead tackles universal themes – from addiction and poverty, to family, love, and the power of friendship and art – it packs a triumphant emotional punch, and is a novel that will withstand the test of time.' - Louise Minchin, 2023 Chair of Judges.
The 2023 shortlist
Fire Rush
Trespasses
Demon Copperhead
Black Butterflies
The Marriage Portrait
Pod
In their own words... the shortlisted authors tell us about their stories
Jacqueline Crooks on
Fire Rush
Your novel in one sentence...
The quest of a woman within the male-dominated dub-reggae underworld to use supra-watt dub music power to find sites of safety for her mind and body.
What inspired you to write your shortlisted book?
The dub reggae sound revolution of the 1970s and 1980s was an important moment in time, and the culture of that world continues to reverberate, impacting on the fashion, music, and language of today. It was a hidden subterranean world and it struck me that many people didn't know of its existence. I wanted to explore through writing the politics of invisibility and was compelled to write about this hidden world, to recreate it from memory and imagination.
Louise Kennedy on
Trespasses
Your novel in one sentence...
Trespasses is a star-crossed love story set in a small town near Belfast in 1975, at the height of the time known as The Troubles.
What inspired you to write your shortlisted book?
*A visit to the Ulster Museum in 2015 made me think about how art can express the unspeakable in a place where language is fraught. I made a ghost of The Troubles in my head and imagined a life for him.
Barbara Kingsolver on
Demon Copperhead
Your novel in one sentence...
This is one boy's journey of survival, but it's also the story of the impoverished, generationally exploited, heartbreakingly beautiful place where I live, America's southern Appalachian mountains.
What inspired you to write your shortlisted book?
If my culture and people show up at all in books, movies, or television, we're portrayed as ignorant, hillbillies. I wanted to represent my home with the respect and compassion it deserves.
Priscilla Morris on
Black Butterflies
Your novel in one sentence...
The siege of Sarajevo (1992-96) as seen through the eyes of Zora, a resilient artist and teacher who sends her family to safety in England before being trapped in her blockaded hometown for ten months.
What inspired you to write your shortlisted book?
Black Butterflies is my personal response to the war that devastated my mother's hometown of Sarajevo. The desire to understand the war, a love for the place where I'd spent childhood summers, and family stories of resilience, loss and survival inspired me. In particular, I was inspired by the stories of my great-uncle's loss of his art studio during the war. The image that was the catalyst for the writing of the novel was that of flames billowing through the windows of the Bosnian National Library, where my great-uncle had his studio. The charred pages of books floated over Sarajevo for days afterwards and people called them 'black butterflies'.
Maggie O’Farrell on
The Marriage Portrait
Your novel in one sentence...
The Marriage Portrait is the story of Lucrezia, a young Duchess in sixteenth-century Ferrara, who realises that her husband is planning to murder her.
What inspired you to write your shortlisted book?
I had the idea just before lockdown began, at the tailend of winter in 2020. I had been rereading Robert Browning's dramatic monologues and I was idly wondering to myself one day whether Browning had based his most famous, My Last Duchess, on real events. I started researching the source of his inspiration and, within minutes, I was staring at a portrait of a young girl, married off at 15, with auburn hair and a rather frightened gaze. I knew instantly that I would write a novel about her.
Laline Paull on
Pod
Your novel in one sentence...
A science-backed dolphin epic of migration, love, loss, family and survival – with many characters of other species all just trying to stay alive in a changing ocean.
What inspired you to write your shortlisted book?
Stupid naive tourist contact swimming with wild dolphins, then realising my blunder and starting to research why one species had driven out another (answer: an oil spill up the coast).
The 2023 longlist
Glory
Children of Paradise
Stone Blind
Cursed Bread
The Dog of the North
I'm a Fan
Wandering Souls
The Bandit Queens
Memphis
Homesick
Not yet available in audio
Meet the judges
Louise Minchin - Chair
Rachel Joyce
Bella Mackie
Irenosen Okojie
Tulip Siddiq
Make a discovery...
Introducing Sui Annukka
Following lead character Surya as she visits London from Sri Lanka, we discover she is not only recovering from tragedy but is also fixated on a long-buried, shameful episode from her past. Exploring themes of grief, guilt, loss and hope The Mother Sun is released on 25 May.
More winners
Previous winners of the Women's Prize for Fiction, launched in 1996.-
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A Woman's Place
- By: Linda Grant
- Narrated by: Anne Hallinan
- Length: 8 hrs and 41 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
San Francisco private eye Catherine Sayler and her partner, Jesse Price, are called in by a computer firm to investigate high-tech sexual harassment that soon turns deadly....
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A Woman's Place
- Narrated by: Anne Hallinan
- Length: 8 hrs and 41 mins
- Release date: 19-03-19
- Language: English
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A Crime in the Neighborhood
- A Novel
- By: Suzanne Berne
- Narrated by: Alyssa Bresnahan
- Length: 7 hrs and 58 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Reminiscent of To Kill a Mockingbird, A Crime in the Neighborhood is the story of a young girl’s coming of age during a turbulent time in American history....
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Dreary
- By timothy on 14-11-18
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A Crime in the Neighborhood
- A Novel
- Narrated by: Alyssa Bresnahan
- Length: 7 hrs and 58 mins
- Release date: 19-05-11
- Language: English
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Regular price: £17.99 or 1 Credit
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