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The International Booker Prize 2024

Kairos
  • ‘It’s a private story of a big love and its decay, but it’s also a story of the dissolution of a whole political system. Simply put: How can something that seems right in the beginning, turn into something wrong?’ – Jenny Erpenbeck on Kairos 
  • Kairos follows last year’s International Booker Prize winner, Time Shelter, in being set during and after the fall of the Iron Curtain in Eastern Europe 
  • Jenny Erpenbeck, who was longlisted for the prize in 2018, becomes the first German writer to win it. Michael Hofmann becomes the first male translator to win
  • Granta Books wins for the second time since 2016, when the prize took its current form
Kairos

Michael Hofmann and Jenny Erpenbeck at the International Booker Prize ceremony at Tate Modern, London

© Dave Benett/Getty Images

Eleanor Wachtel, Chair of judges said:

‘In luminous prose, Jenny Erpenbeck exposes the complexity of a relationship between a young student and a much older writer, tracking the daily tensions and reversals that mark their intimacy, staying close to the apartments, cafés, and city streets, workplaces and foods of East Berlin. It starts with love and passion, but it’s at least as much about power, art and culture. The self-absorption of the lovers, their descent into a destructive vortex, remains connected to the larger history of East Germany during this period, often meeting history at odd angles. 

‘Michael Hofmann’s translation captures the eloquence and eccentricities of Erpenbeck’s writing, the rhythm of its run-on sentences, the expanse of her emotional vocabulary. 

‘What makes Kairos so unusual is that it is both beautiful and uncomfortable, personal and political. Erpenbeck invites you to make the connection between these generation-defining political developments and a devastating, even brutal love affair, questioning the nature of destiny and agency. Like the GDR, it starts with optimism and trust, then unravels.’

Portrait of Eleanor Wachtel.

The International Booker Prize 2024 judge Eleanor Wachtel.

Hugo Glendinning

Fiammetta Rocco, Administrator of the International Booker Prize, said:

‘The judges have read 149 books, the largest number ever submitted for the International Booker Prize. I have sat in on all their meetings over the past year, and have witnessed at first hand the warmth, intelligence and humour that they brought to their discussions. Their winner, after many months of deliberation, is a book about love and politics. About the fissures of history. About how relationships can start out fierce and idealistic only to bend under pressure and eventually break. And about how long it takes for people, and for nations, to heal. 

‘I would like to say a huge thank you to Eleanor Wachtel and her fellow judges. And also to Maison Valentino, who have sponsored the ceremony tonight. We have long admired the work they’ve done with Booker Prize authors and are delighted to be the latest beneficiaries of their support for the literary world. Their contribution has also enabled us to donate 500 sets of the shortlisted books to libraries across the UK via The Reading Agency.’

Fiammetta Rocco

Administrator of the International Booker Prize, Fiammetta Rocco

Kairos

Translated by
Michael Hofmann
Published by
Granta Books
Kairos is the winner of the International Booker Prize 2024. An intimate and devastating story of the path of two lovers through the ruins of a relationship, set against the backdrop of a seismic period in European history

The shortlist

Yellow book cover of Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck with a black and white photo of a woman.
Prize winner
Kairos is the winner of the International Booker Prize 2024. An intimate and devastating story of the path of two lovers through the ruins of a relationship, set against the backdrop of a seismic period in European history

The longlist

Book cover of Simpatia by Rodrigo Blanco Calderon showing a blurry image of a dog and it's reflection.

Simpatía

by Rodrigo Blanco Calderón

Translated by Noel Hernández González Daniel Hahn

Yellow book cover of Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck with a black and white photo of a woman.
Prize winner

Kairos

by Jenny Erpenbeck (prize winner)

Translated by Michael Hofmann

Book cover of Mater 2-10 by Hwang Sok-yong, showing a train and tall water tower.

Mater 2-10

by Hwang Sok-yong

Translated by Sora Kim-Russell Youngjae Josephine Bae