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Paul Beatty was on Tuesday named as the first American to win the prestigious Man Booker fiction prize for The Sellout, a biting satire on race relations in the United States.
Chair of the five judges for the 50,000 pound ($60,900) prize Amanda Foreman said The Sellout had been a unanimous choice, reached after a meeting lasting some four hours.
“It manages to eviscerate every social nuance, every sacred cow, while making us laugh and also making us wince ... It is really a novel for our times.”
“Paul Beatty has said being offended is not an emotion. That's his answer to the reader,” Foreman said.
“This really is a genuine first-class piece of serious literature wrapped up in a shawl of humour,” she added.
The Sellout is 54-year-old Beatty's fourth novel. He has also edited an anthology of African-American humour.
(This article has been published in an arrangement with Reuters and has been cut for length.)