The five shortlisted novels are Anjali Joseph's "The Living", "The Story of a Brief Marriage" by Anuk Arudpragasam, Aravind Adiga's "Selection Day", Karan Mahajan's "The Association of Small Bombs" and "In the Jungles of the Night" by Stephen Alter.
According to jury chair Ritu Menon, all the five novels display a remarkable skill in animating current universal preoccupations in unconventional idioms, and from a distinctively South Asian perspective.
The best fictionists are the best because they manage to work these familiar furrows with such canniness, aplomb, and (various) imaginative and formal force as to make them rise out of the ordinary, he adds.
"Such rising is the characteristic of our shortlist."
"This has a lot to do with Canadian and US and some British universities providing a home for South Asian writers - beginning, in the case of the US and Canada, at the student level. Which is, of course, why the most notable of modern South Asian fiction is often about uprootedness, geographical and spiritual alienation, being liminal between cultures," he told PTI.
"This year the allure of joining extremist organisations overseas for those living comfortable, middle class lives in the West was an additional concern," he says.
"Issues relating to diasporic living persist in South Asian writing emerging from the UK and the US though the focus is now on the children or grandchildren of immigrants," he adds.
Although no translation made it to the shortlist, Perera says the jury read many excellent translations which provided another dimension to the competition.
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