‘I fly, I drive. We’re all complicit’: Richard Flanagan on vanishing species and refusing the Baillie Gifford prize money
The Australian’s book about his parents’ love and his father’s horrific experience of Burma’s Death Railway won the illustrious nonfiction award. Here he talks about finding beauty and hope in the age of extinction and despair
Richard Flanagan had only just got home from a trek through the wilderness when “the phone started going off like a chainsaw revving”. The day before, he had been standing in a grove of 1,000-year-old pencil pines, trees that he fears may not be around in a decade, such is the effect of the climate crisis on alpine heathland and rainforest in his native Tasmania, Australia. But now, on the other side of the world, his book Question 7 had just been awarded the Baillie Gifford prize for nonfiction, making him the first writer to win both this and the Booker, which he received in 2014 for The Narrow Road to the Deep North.
Flanagan’s prerecorded acceptance speech initially followed customary form, thanking the prize’s judging panel, his fellow shortlisted writers and its sponsors, the investment management company that gives the award its name and which in recent times has become the focus of intense scrutiny over its ties to the fossil fuel industry. His soul would be troubled, Flanagan explained, if he did not draw attention to the devastating impact the climate crisis was having on his own country and to urge Baillie Gifford to meet with him and outline a plan for its withdrawal from any involvement in fossil fuels. Until that time, continued the 63-year-old, he would delay taking receipt of the £50,000 prize money. “As each of us is guilty,” he concluded, “each of us too bears a responsibility to act: a writer, a fund manager.”
Continue reading...Topics
-
Booker Prize winner Richard Flanagan adds Baillie Gifford nonfiction prize to his trophy shelf
Entertainment - ABC News - Yesterday -
Booker Prize winner Richard Flanagan adds Baillie Gifford nonfiction prize to his trophy shelf
World - ABC News - Yesterday -
Richard Flanagan: ‘I’m not sure that I will write again’
World - The Guardian - 4 days ago -
DNA firm holding highly sensitive data 'vanishes' without warning
Top stories - BBC News - November 9 -
After Baillie Gifford: are literary festivals on their last legs?
World - The Guardian - October 23 -
Yes, I think Democrats are complicit in genocide. But Trump would be far worse | Wajahat Ali
World - The Guardian - October 29 -
'Spa refused me a massage because I have cancer'
Top stories - BBC News - 5 days ago -
‘If I can’t afford a first-class ticket, I don’t fly’: Airlines should raise prices to reduce the number of passengers. Am I wrong?
Business - MarketWatch - November 11 -
Salah wants to 'win it all' with Liverpool this year
Sports - ESPN - November 13
More from The Guardian
-
ICC issues arrest warrants for Benjamin Netanyahu, Yoav Gallant and Mohamed Deif over alleged war crimes – Middle East live
World - The Guardian - 16 minutes ago -
Ukraine claims Russia fired intercontinental ballistic missile at Dnipro
World - The Guardian - 1 hour ago -
John Prescott, British former deputy prime minister, dies aged 86
World - The Guardian - 4 hours ago -
Transgender woman wins record payout in China after electroshock treatment
World - The Guardian - 3 hours ago -
Cop29 climate finance deal hits fresh setback as deadline looms
World - The Guardian - 4 hours ago