
British-Palestinian writer NS Nuseibeh wins Jhalak prose prize for writers of colour
British-Palestinian writer NS Nuseibeh has won the Jhalak prose prize for writers of colour for a 'timely' and 'timeless' essay collection, Namesake, which explores identity, religion and colonialism.
The inaugural Jhalak poetry prize went to Mimi Khalvati for a book of collected poems, while the children's and young adult prize was awarded to Nathanael Lessore for King of Nothing, a teen comedy about an unlikely friendship between two boys.
'These are books full of courage, insight and panache,' said prize director Sunny Singh. 'They compassionately and with utmost honesty confront terrible realities and explore painful and complex histories and lives even as they exemplify playful stylistic experimentation and mastery of form and language.'
The winners were announced at a ceremony at the British Library in London on Wednesday evening, with each writer awarded £1,000.
In Namesake, Nuseibeh looks towards her namesake, Nusayba, an early convert who fought alongside the prophet Muhammad. The book is 'an illuminating and trenchant exploration of Muslim feminism', wrote Dina Nayeri in a Guardian review.
'Searching and honest, these essays carry the reader from New York dinner parties to seventh-century battlefields to Jerusalem checkpoints and down the alleyways of a shrewd and compassionate mind,' Nayeri added.
This year's prose prize was judged by the novelist Sareeta Domingo, journalist and writer Taran N Khan and nonfiction writer Yepoka Yeebo, who won the 2024 prize.
Sign up to Bookmarks
Discover new books and learn more about your favourite authors with our expert reviews, interviews and news stories. Literary delights delivered direct to you
after newsletter promotion
Nuseibeh was selected as winner from a shortlist that also featured My Friends by Hisham Matar, Everest by Ashani Lewis, Manny and the Baby by Varaidzo, The Rest of You by Maame Blue, and Where We Come From by Aniefiok Ekpoudom.
Khalvati's Collected Poems 'is a luminous testament to a lifetime of lyrical precision, emotional depth, and formal mastery', said poet Jason Allen-Paisant, who was joined on the judging panel by Malika Booker and Will Harris.
Other books shortlisted for the poetry prize were Adam by the late Gboyega Odubanjo, Boiled Owls by Azad Ashim Sharma, Horse by Rushika Wick, Self-Portrait With Family by Amaan Hyder, and Top Doll by Karen McCarthy Woolf.
Children's and young adult winner King of Nothing also topped the older readers category in the Waterstones children's book prize earlier this year. 'It's testament to Lessore's lightness of touch and believable characters that despite delving into big topics such as toxic masculinity and grief, this is an immensely readable book that never feels too worthy', wrote Fiona Noble in the Guardian. Broadcaster and writer Yassmin Abdel-Magied, 2024 winner Hiba Noor Khan and Alom Shaha judged this year's children's and young adult prize.
Alongside Lessore on the shortlist were Bringing Back Kay-Kay by Dev Kothari, Flower Block by Lanisha Butterfield and Hoang Giang, Mayowa and the Sea of Words by Chibundu Onuzo, The Boy to Beat the Gods by Ashley Thorpe, and The Thread That Connects Us by Ayaan Mohamud.
The prize, established in 2017, is open to books published by writers of colour in the UK or Ireland. Past winners of the prize include Reni Eddo-Lodge, Guy Gunaratne and Travis Alabanza.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
27 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Has Nigel finally shown he can actually be a team player?
Court intrigue always makes good copy, and for that reason we journalists should be sure to add to any speculation about Zia Yusuf's dramatic yo-yoing in and out of Reform UK this week an important qualifier: his proffered explanation, that it was a misjudgement due to 'exhaustion', is perfectly plausible. Politics can be a gruelling business at the best of times, especially when trying to bootstrap a new party into a national force – not to mention a culture shock for people more used to the world of business. Yet if speculation was rife about Yusuf's spectacular (if short-lived) departure, it was in large part because Nigel Farage has in his long career in politics proven time and again that for all his strengths as a campaigner, he has a critical weakness: an apparently chronic inability to work with others and build institutions that last. No potential leadership rival lasts long. In 2015, he recommended Suzanne Evans as his replacement as leader of Ukip – only for the party to end up 'rejecting his resignation', leaving his rival's wings well and truly clipped. A year later, Diane James had the privilege of being Farage's successor for less than three weeks before he was back once again as interim leader (although he did then step back for good). Most recently, we have seen Reform UK struggle to coordinate even a small number of MPs, most obviously with the expulsion of Rupert Lowe (single-handedly responsible for almost half the recorded parliamentary work of Reform's entire caucus). But before that, Farage almost wrecked his party's alliance with the Northern Irish TUV by endorsing his old friend, the DUP's Ian Paisley Jr, against TUV leader Jim Allister – despite Allister having the Reform logo all over his leaflets. Awkwardly, Allister went on to win North Antrim. Things were eventually smoothed over, but the deal had to be renegotiated, and the cost of that may have been huge: had the Commons authorities accepted Allister as counting as a Reform candidate at the election, the party would have had six MPs – the magic number needed to unlock hundreds of thousands of pounds more in public funding each and every year. The history of the Faragist parties tells the same story. If Yusuf has his work cut out building a national campaigning force from scratch, part of the reason is that Farage allowed decades of effort to fall by the wayside when he abandoned Ukip. At the 2015 election, Ukip came second in a hundred seats; it had also started to make a breakthrough in local councils, albeit with many of the same teething problems now facing Reform. It even won seven seats in the Welsh Assembly in 2016. Farage's ability to snap his fingers and call a new party out of the earth, as he did with the Brexit Party, is undoubtedly impressive. But it reset the clock on all that organisational effort. In Europe, Right-wing parties successfully challenging the status quo tend to have a decade of work behind them: Spain's Vox and Germany's AfD were both founded in 2013; Giorgia Meloni's Fratelli d'Italia in 2012. Patching things up with Yusuf removes one big question mark about the long-term viability of Reform UK. But only one. Back-room organisation is necessary but not sufficient for sustained success, and Farage has yet to prove he can work with other politicians, especially ones of the calibre to succeed him one day. Until he does, Reform will remain a one-man band – and it's hard to build the party of the future around a man in his sixties who has already, more than once, tried to leave politics behind.


Daily Mail
28 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Rhian Sugden sets pulses racing as she shows off her 'big old boobs' in white sheer bra ahead of her breast reduction surgery
Rhian Sugden sent temperatures soaring as she flaunted her 'big old boobs' while posing in a sexy sheer bra ahead of her breast reduction surgery. The glamour model, 38, looked sensational in the laced lingerie set as she beamed for the lens. 'A moment for my skin and another for the tig ol bitties,' she captioned her latest Instagram post on Friday. 'T minus 2 weeks before these absolute back breakers get an overhaul making me a perky Sue again.' Rhian recently revealed she wanted to get breast reduction surgery as her size F-cup bust make it 'unbearable' to walk. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the Daily Mail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'A moment for my skin and another for the tig ol bitties,' she captioned her latest Instagram post She wrote: 'One month to go until my breast uplift + reduction = one perkier, lighter, better version of me incoming! 'The countdown to the boob reboot is ON! @pallmallcosmetics ✨.' Rhian previously shared a comparison photo of her breasts - one showing her current large breasts and another showing what they looked like before. She also posted several screenshots of cruel comments from trolls criticising her decision to reduce her size, before revealing her 'soon-to-be nipple position' to her followers. Explaining her reasons for wanting the surgery, Rhian said: '12 months ago before I got pregnant my boobs where large but still at a manageable size of a DD/E cup.' 'After having a baby my size has increased to an F and I'm spilling out of my bras even at that size. I'm having an uplift and a reduction.' 'Boob experts (men) are messaging me telling me to just lose weight and they'll shrink. Look at me!?? I'm the size I was yet despite your professional advice my melons haven't shrunk. Who'd have thought?' She went on: 'My back hurts. I long to wear backless dresses. Buy sexy lingerie, wear no bra when I go out, run, swim without them falling out of my swim suit. They don't make me happy this big. 'Messaging me and calling me deluded for wanting a reduction to go back to the size I was 12 months ago - is absurd. Seriously, what is wrong with humans these days. 'It's MY body. It's my Happiness and it's MY choice. 'The surgeon has said my nipples are 11 centimetres LOWER than they should be, that my friends is not where I want them. 'I'm sharing my journey as it's a very big and yes, scary move for me but this is something I NEED to do for myself. To make myself feel better. 'It'd be nice to have support and people that don't have anything nice to say just don't say anything at all ❤️'


The Independent
34 minutes ago
- The Independent
Zia Yusuf returns to Reform UK just 48 hours after quitting as chairman
Zia Yusuf is returning to Reform UK just 48 hours after quitting as party chairman, claiming his resignation was a 'mistake'. The 38-year-old businessman said his decision to stand down had been the result of 'exhaustion' and working for 11 months 'without a day off'. Party leader Nigel Farage, speaking to the Sunday Times newspaper alongside Mr Yusuf, said the former chairman will now effectively be doing 'four jobs', though his title has not yet been decided. He will lead Reform's plans to cut public spending – the so-called 'UK Doge', based on the US Department of Government Efficiency which was led by tech billionaire Elon Musk. The ex-chairman will also take part in policymaking, fundraising and media appearances. Mr Yusuf said he was quitting Reform following the latest in a series of internal rows, in which he described a question to the Prime Minister concerning a ban on burkas from his party's newest MP as 'dumb'. Announcing his resignation on Thursday afternoon, he said: 'I no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office.' Mr Yusuf said he had been left feeling undervalued by some in the party and drained after being subjected to relentless racist abuse on X, and made the comments in 'error'. 'I spoke to Nigel and said I don't mind saying I made an error. It was a function of exhaustion,' he said. Asked about the row over talk of banning the burka, Mr Yusuf said he 'certainly did not resign because I have any strong views about the burqa itself' but felt blindsided by Sarah Pochin's question to Sir Keir Starmer. He said that 'if there were a vote and I was in parliament, I would probably vote to ban it actually' but that 'philosophically I am always a bit uneasy about banning things which, for example, would be unconstitutional in the United States, which such a ban no doubt would be'. Reform will hope the show of unity between Mr Farage and the former chairman is enough to quell concerns about internal personality clashes, amid recent scrutiny of the leader's fallings out with former allies. It follows the suspension of MP Rupert Lowe from the party following complaints about his conduct, which he denied, and suggested the leader had a tendency to row with colleagues he felt threatened by. Labour branded Mr Yusuf's return a 'humiliating hokey-cokey' and said working people could not afford 'the risk of economic chaos with Reform UK'. Party chairwoman Ellie Reeves said: 'Reform's revolving door shows that the party is all about one person – Nigel Farage. 'Zia Yusuf's humiliating hokey-cokey is laughable but there is nothing funny about Farage's £80 billion in unfunded commitments. 'His reckless plan is Liz Truss's disastrous mini-budget on steroids and would spark economic chaos that increases bills and mortgages. 'Working people simply can't afford the risk of economic chaos with Reform UK.'