Man Booker Prize 2011 Winner: Julian Barnes, The Sense of an Ending

We’re thrilled to announce that Julian Barnes’s The Sense of an Ending has taken home the 2011 Man Booker Prize.

In this video from The Telegraph, taken shortly after the prize was announced, Barnes quips that The Sense of an Ending is “the best novel I’ve written in the last five years.”

Read an excerpt here.

More about the book:
By an acclaimed writer at the height of his powers, The Sense of an Ending extends a streak of extraordinary books that began with the best-selling Arthur & George and continued with Nothing to Be Frightened Of and, most recently, Pulse.

This intense new novel follows a middle-aged man as he contends with a past he has never much thought about—until his closest childhood friends return with a vengeance, one of them from the grave, another maddeningly present. Tony Webster thought he’d left all this behind as he built a life for himself, and by now his marriage and family and career have fallen into an amicable divorce and retirement. But he is then presented with a mysterious legacy that obliges him to reconsider a variety of things he thought he’d understood all along, and to revise his estimation of his own nature and place in the world.

A novel so compelling that it begs to be read in a single sitting, with stunning psychological and emotional depth and sophistication, The Sense of an Ending is a brilliant new chapter in Julian Barnes’s oeuvre.