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Taiwanese author Yáng Shuang-zi and translator Lin King won the 2026 International Booker Prize for Taiwan Travelogue, announced at a ceremony in London’s Tate Modern.
The £50,000 award will be split equally between author and translator.
Judges, chaired by novelist Natasha Brown, praised the book as both “a romance and an incisive postcolonial novel.” Presented as a rediscovered travel memoir set in 1930s Japan‑occupied Taiwan, the story follows a Japanese novelist’s culinary tour and her fraught relationship with a Taiwanese interpreter; it foregrounds themes of colonial power, class and queer desire.
The win marks the first time a work originally written in Mandarin has taken the International Booker and the first time winners are Taiwanese and Taiwanese‑American.
Taiwan Travelogue was selected from 128 submissions; its English translation previously won the 2024 National Book Award for translated literature and the Mandarin original won Taiwan’s Golden Tripod Award.
Publisher And Other Stories — which also won last year — will share in the likely sales boost that typically follows the prize.




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