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German writer David Wagner receives the prize for his novel Leben in Beijing. [Photo/China Daily]
A Chinese literary award honors foreign writers whose stories stand out in telling universal themes. Xing Yi reports.
German writer David Wagner this month became the first foreign writer to win a cash prize from a Chinese literary award.
The author won $10,000 from the Taofen Foundation, named after celebrated Chinese correspondent and publisher Zou Taofen (1895-1944), for his novel, Leben, upon topping the 21st Century Best Foreign Novel of the Year 2014 list.
The Chinese Association of Foreign Literature and People's Literature Publishing House jointly released the list. Six novels from Germany, Russia, France, Canada, Spain and Romania won.
The list and award have been issued annually since 2002 but without prize money.
"Our prize money is less than a hundredth of the Nobel Prize but 1,000 times higher than Prix Goncourt and equal to the Franz Kafka Prize," jury director Nie Zhenning says, jokingly.
Leben, which literally translates as "To Live", is about an organ transplant. It's loosely based on the author's experience of receiving a liver transplant six years ago.
Wagner, who was born in 1971, was diagnosed with congenital chronic autoimmune hepatitis at age 14. Wagner stayed positive while struggling with his illness. He studied comparative literature and arthistory at universities in Bonn, Berlin and Paris, and published several novels and essay collections.
The book reflects on life and death. It blurs the line between the narrator's internal monologues and the author's self-disclosure.
The narrator recalls life events, depicts doctors and nurses in the hospital, listens to confessions of patients in nearby beds and realizes that he should fight to live for his daughter and his donor.
The German version won the Leipzig Book Fair prize in fiction in 2013.
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