ANNOUNCING THE 1991 SHIVA NAIPAUL MEMORIAL PRIZE
Shiva Naipaul was one of the most gifted and accomplished writers of our time. After his death in
August 1985 at the age of 40, The Spectator set up a fund to establish an annual prize in his mem- ory. Previous winners have included Hilary Mantel, Sousa Jamba, William T. Vollmann and
Humphry Smith.
In his notebook Shiva Naipaul wrote: All journeys begin the same way. All travel is a form of self- extinction.' As a man outside every tribe, he saw himself as a traveller in the world, observing curi- ously the loyalties of men which he could not share. It was from this observation that he derived his greatest insights. He also wrote: .
A journey, one hopes, will become its own justification, will assume patterns, reveal its possibilities — reveal, even, its layers of meaning — as one goes along, trusting to chance, to instinct, to hunch. Journeys undertaken in this spirit acknowledging, that is, the obscurity of the impulses that have provoked them — resemble a work of the imagination:
a piece of fiction, say. Sometimes when we set out to write a novel all we have to begin with are stray, enigmatic images, evanescent scraps of feeling and intuition, which unite to create an intimation of possibility. Our literary labours delve after that possibility and seek to bring it to the surface and give it form. When you start off you do not necessarily know where you are going or why.
The Shiva Naipaul Memorial Prize is to be awarded to the writer best able to describe a visit to a foreign place or people. The award will not be for travel writing in the conventional sense, but for the most acute and profound observation of cultures and/or scenes evidently alien to the writer.
Such scenes and/or cultures might be found as easily within the writer's native country as outside it.
The winner will receive a cash prize of £1,000.
Rules published and should be not more than 4,000 first Shiva Naipaul Memorial Prize. words (a length at which Shiva Naipaul particu- larly excelled). Entry Procedure 3. Entries must reach The Spectator by 29 Novem- 1. Entries should be typed double-spaced.
ber 1991.
4. Entries will not be returned and no correspon- separate sheet of paper: Bence concerning entries can be entered into. Surname and forenames, 5. In all matters concerning the competition the Date of birth.
decision of the editor is final. writers of any nationality under the age of 35 on The Spectator, Mark Amory, literary editor of the closing date for entries. The Spectator, Christopher Sinclair-Stevenson, the publisher, Gillon Aitken, the literary agent, 2. Entrants must give the following details on a Complete address, 3. Entries should be addressed to: Shiva Naipaul