Along with her the panel comprises Arshia Sattar, Indian translator, writer and a teacher, Ameena Saiyid, MD of Oxford University Press in Pakistan, Rosie Boycott, acclaimed British journalist and editor and Paul Yamazaki, a veteran bookseller from the US.
"The panel brings with them a wide array of varied experience and also represents the interests and creative principles of writing pertaining to the South Asian region - an objective that the DSC Prize is dedicated to," according to a statement by the organisers.
The USD 50,000 DSC Prize recognises works of fiction from across the globe that highlight South Asia, its people, culture and diaspora
The jury panel is currently in the process of assessing the 65 entries received from publishers all across the world.
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For the fourth edition of the prize has seen a 45 per cent growth in the number of entries received as compared to the inaugural DSC Prize 2011, with about a quarter of the entries coming in from UK, USA, Canada and Australia to supplement the entries from the South Asian countries, say DSC authorities.
The winner of the USD 50,000 DSC Prize for South Asian Literature 2014 would be announced at the DSC Jaipur Literature Festival in Jaipur by the end of January 2014.
"Happily, in this exciting hunt, the DSC Prize is not restrained by language or nationality. The books under consideration include translations from a variety of languages that make the literatures of South Asia so vibrant. They also include books by non-Asian authors," Sen said.
The DSC Prize for South Asian Literature has previously been won in 2011 by H M Naqvi for "Home Boy", by Shehan Karunatilaka in 2012 for "Chinaman: The Legend of Pradeep Mathew" and in 2013 by Jeet Thayil for "Narcopolis."
Each of these winners has gone on to be published internationally.