Two family stories based on สมัครสมาชิกสล็อต twins are among the novels shortlisted for this year's Women's Prize for Fiction.Brit Bennett's The Vanishing Half follows the lives of two identical black siblings. One starts a new life and passes for white.Claire Fuller's Unsettled Ground is the story of the 51-year-old twins whose world was transformed when their mother died.Four more novels, including two debut titles, are also in the works. The winners will be announced on July 7.
Favorite List:
Piranesi by Susanna Clarke - This is her first novel since Jonathan Strange and the famous Mr. Norrell published in 2004.Piranesi is a mystery based on a man who lives alone. In the house "Where there was a maze hall" until one day he realized he was not alone. Unsettled Ground by Claire Fuller is about betrayal and resilience, love and survival. It is a portrait of life on the edge of society, based on the negative consequences when adult twins, Genie and Julius, face the death of their mother Dot.
The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett is another book about the inseparable twin siblings of children who ultimately choose to live in two different worlds, one black and white. It's also a favorite of former US President Barack Obama.he Unbeatable Realm by Yaa Gyasi is a moving picture of a Ghanaian immigrant family destroyed by depression, addiction and grief, and about faith, science, religion and love. This is Gyasi's second novel, Her Homecoming is one of Oprah Winfrey's book of the year.
How an armed sister swept her house by Cherie Jones is the Barbadian writer's debut novel. Set on Jones' hometown island, this multi-family drama tackles poverty and violence beyond beautiful beaches.Nobody is talking about it by Patricia Lockwood, the re-launch is about a woman who builds huge followers on social media and then travels the world to meet her favorite fans. But is there life
after the Internet?
Booker Prize laureate Bernardine Evaristo whose novel Girl, Woman, Other was also nominated for the Women's Prize last year as chairman.She said: "Women's fiction challenges simple categorization or stereotypes, and these issues grapple with the big issues of society expressed through exciting storytelling. Will too.Prize recipients will be awarded £ 30,000 and a limited edition bronze figurine known as Bessie, created by artist Grizel Niven.Maggie O'Farrell won the award last year for her novel Hamnet, based on the life of Shakespeare's son.