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Rushdie favourite for ''Best of the Booker''

But Rushdie, best known for his 1988 novel ''The Satanic Verses'' which outraged many Muslims and prompted death threats against him, faces tough competition from a shortlist of literary heavyweights.
They range from Australian Peter Carey to South Africa's Nobel Prize winners Nadine Gordimer and JM Coetzee.
In
1981
Rushdie's
novel
Midnight's
Children
won
the
Booker
Prize
for
Fiction.
Then
in
1993
the
magical-realist
exploration
of
Indian
history
was
judged
as
the
best
novel
to
have
won
the
Booker
in
the
award's
first
quarter
of
a
century.
Bookmakers William Hill are taking no chances, making Rushdie the 6-4 favourite. Next in line at odds of 3-1 is British author Pat Barker for The Ghost Road, her World War I tale of a shell-shocked officer.
''Salman Rushdie is the obvious favourite as he and his book have become the Sergeant Pepper of the literary world'', said William Hill.
Third favourite at odds of 4-1 is Peter Carey for Oscar and Lucinda. Next in line at 5-1 comes Coetzee for his 1999 Booker winner Disgrace. The two outsiders are Gordimer's The Conservationist at 8-1 and JG Farrell's The Siege of Krishnapur at 10-1.
Millions of readers around the world have the chance to pick their favourite. Votes can be registered on www.themanbookerprize.com or sent by text until July 8.
Biographer
Victoria
Glendinning,
chair
of
the
judges
choosing
the
shortlist,
said,
''We
really
feel
the
six
novels
we
picked
represent
the
best
fiction-writing
of
the
past
40
years
and
that
each
one
of
them
will
stand
the
test
of
time.''
The
overall
winner
will
be
announced
at
the
London
Literature
Festival
on
July
10.



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