Jury chair Ritu Menon says the process followed by the international jury was one of consultation and consensus throughout.
Besides eminent writer Menon, other members of the jury are Valentine Cunningham, Professor Emeritus at Oxford University; US-based Steven Bernstein, screenwriter, director, author, cinematographer and lecturer; television broadcaster Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, based in London; and Senath Walter Perera of the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka.
Despite the diversity in their backgrounds and reading contexts, the exchanges and sharing of views were remarkably cordial, with each juror commenting on the novels selected in detail, and from their perspectives, she says.
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According to Cunningham, the process of selecting the longlist and then the shortlist worked well.
"The longlist was arrived by long-distance email communication between the judges scattered across the globe! Chairperson managed this part very judiciously, I thought. The shortlist was arrived when the jury met in the flesh in London," he says.
The short-listed five were the agreed quintet of the jury, Cunningham says.
"As is normal, not every member of the jury was equally enthusiastic for all five, and equally normally there were certain fictions that some jurists regretted not getting on the shortlist. But this is committee work and the practice is, as here, for the jury to accept majority voting. And to agree that the shortlist finally arrived at has due merit," he says. The five shortlisted books are each different from each other, with different qualities, but all are considerably abled fictions, Cunningham says.
"As it transpired, all panelists agreed with her plan. A deadline was given for the judges to come up with individual lists. Contact among the judges become more frequent just before the long-listing until consensus was reached. The process was the same just before the shortlisting and at present when jurors are going through the shortlisted entries to pick a winner," Perera says.
"That was one of the 'interesting aspects when comparing the judging of this DSC prize with some others I have been involved in," he says.
The five novels in the race for the DSC prize are Anjali Josephs "The Living", "The Story of a Brief Marriage" by Anuk Arudpragasam, Aravind Adigas "Selection Day", Karan Mahajans "The Association of Small Bombs" and "In the Jungles of the Night" by Stephen Alter.