I am absolutely thrilled to be able to shout loudly on my blog about the prestigious Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize for 2022!
Huge thanks to the lovely Fiona at Midas PR for letting me know about this incredible
selection of diverse young writers.
From Sri Lanka to Trinidad, Texas, and Ireland via the Middle East, this year’s longlist features a powerful, international collection of writers who are offering platforms for under-represented voices.
This year’s longlist celebrates female voices from around the world and includes: the gritty
debut novel by interdisciplinary London artist Tice Cin titled Keeping the House, American novelist Patricia Lockwood’s meditation on love, language and human connection in No
One is Talking About This, Dantiel W. Moniz’s debut collection of short intergenerational stories in Milk Blood Heat that contemplate human connection, race, womanhood, inheritance, and the elemental darkness in us all, British writer Fiona Mozley’s urban comedy Hot Stew, the honest and darkly funny debut novel Acts of Desperation by emerging star of Irish literature Megan Nolan, and British-born Prague-based Helen Oyeyemi’s exploration of what it means to be seen by another person in Peaces.
There are also two female poets up for the £20,000 Prize including Desiree Bailey for her
lyrical quest for belonging and freedom in What Noise Against the Cane as she draws on her cultural identity and upbringing in Trinidad and Tobago, as well as Indian-born Nidhi Zak/Aria Eipe whose first poetry collection Auguries of a Minor God follows two different journeys, the first of love and the wounds it makes and the second following a family of refugees who have fled to the West from conflict in an unspecified Middle Eastern country.
The debut novelist line-up is further completed by the contemporary classic The Sweetness of
Water by Nathan Harris who fuses together historical fiction and the complex reality of society today, and the achingly beautiful love story Open Water (now sold in 13 territories worldwide) by 25-year-old British-Ghanaian writer Caleb Azumah Nelson who shines a light on race and masculinity. Additionally among the 12 authors on the 2022 longlist are Sri Lankan writer Anuk Arudpragasam for his masterful novel, A Passage North, which explores age and youth, loss and survival in the wake of the devastation of Sri Lanka’s 30-year civil war and Brandon Taylor’s Filthy Animals that brings together quietly devastating stories of young people caught up in violence and desire, while longing for intimacy.

Chaired by Jaipur Literature Festival’s co-founder-director, and award-winning author
Namita Gokhale, the longlisted titles will now be whittled down to a six strong shortlist by an impressive panel of judges including novelist, playwright, and winner of the 2006 Dylan Thomas Prize Rachel Trezise, celebrated Poet and novelist Luke Kennard who recently won the 2021 Forward poetry prize, novelist and Swansea University lecturer Alan Bilton, and Nigerian British author Irenosen Okojie who was awarded an MBE For Services to Literature in 2021.
Through themes of identity, conflict and love, this year’s longlist comprises eight novels, two poetry collections and two short story collections:
They include-
- ‘A Passage North’ by Anuk Arudpragasam
- ‘What Noise Against The Cane’ by Desiree Bailey
- ‘Keeping the House’ by Tice Cin
- ‘Auguries Of A Minor God’ by Nidhi Zak/Aria Eipe
- ‘The Sweetness Of Water’by Nathan Harris
- ‘No One Is Talking About This’ by Patricia Lockwood
- ‘Milk Blood Heat’ by Dantiel W Moniz
- ‘Hot Stew’ by Fiona Mozley
- ‘Open Water’ by Caleb Azumah Nelson
- ‘Acts Of Desperation’ by Megan Nolan
- ‘Peaces’ by Helen Oyeyemi
- ‘Filthy Animals’ by Brandon Taylor
Worth £20,000, it is one of the UK’s most prestigious literary prizes as well as the world’s largest literary prize for young writers.
Awarded for the best published literary work in the English language, written by an author aged 39 or under, the Prize celebrates the international world of fiction in all its forms including poetry, novels, short stories and drama.
On receiving the 2021 award for her ‘fearless’ debut ‘Luster’, Raven Leilani said:
‘Very early in my life, Dylan Thomas’ work was an enormous comfort and inspiration to me, so this is an incredible honor and affirmation. When I first encountered his work, I was around twelve and just starting to write, and I remember taking one of his collections home from the library and trying emulate his rhythm. I still have diaries full of those attempts, and I want to thank the judges, the readers, my family and friends, and my brilliant colleagues at Picador and Trident for their support. It means everything to me.’
The shortlist will be announced on the 31st March followed by the Winner’s Ceremony held in Swansea on 12th May, two days before International Dylan Thomas Day.
Links-https://www.swansea.ac.uk/dylan-thomas-prize/
Twitter @midaspr @dylanthomasprize
- 2022
- A Passage North
- Acts Of Desperation
- Anuk Arudpragasam
- Arie Eipe
- Auguries Of A Minor God
- Bloomsbury Circus
- Brandon Taylor
- Caleb Azumah Nelson
- Dantiel W Moniz
- Daunt Books Publishing
- Desiree Bailey
- Dylan Thomas Prize
- Faber
- Fiction
- Filthy Animals
- Fiona Mozley
- Granta
- Headline
- Helen Oyeyemi
- Hot Stew
- John Murray Press
- Jonathan Cape
- Keeping The House
- Longlist
- Luster
- Megan Nolan
- Milk Blood Heat
- Nathan Harris
- Nidhi Zak
- No One Is Talking About This
- Novels
- Open Water
- Patricia Lockwood
- Peaces
- Raven Leilani
- Short Stories
- Swansea University
- The Sweetness Of Water
- Tice Cin
- Tinder Press
- Viking General
- What Noise Against The Cane
- Yale University Press