<p>The Booker Prize for fiction is one of the world's top literary awards, making the names of writers from Salman Rushdie to Margaret Atwood and Hilary Mantel.</p>.<p>The latest winner -- chosen from the most diverse shortlist in its five-decade history -- will be announced Thursday at a ceremony featuring former US president Barack Obama in London.</p>.<p>Here is a recap of the prize's highs and lows:</p>.<p>The prize is for a work of fiction originally written in English and published in the UK.</p>.<p>The winner gets £50,000 (about $65,000, 57,000 euros). While well below the roughly $930,000 for the Nobel Prize for Literature, it tops the Pulitzer's $15,000 purse.</p>.<p>France's Goncourt offers a symbolic 10 euros ($11).</p>.<p>But sales of the winning book -- and often those on the shortlist -- skyrocket, with the Booker also promising "guaranteed international recognition".</p>.<p>The Booker sparked controversy from the start but there was consternation in Britain when the prize was opened to American writers in 2014.</p>.<p>Previously it had been reserved to authors from Britain, Ireland, Commonwealth countries and Zimbabwe.</p>.<p>The "dice are now loaded against UK authors," complained novelist and former judge Susan Hill.</p>.<p>Australia's two-time winner Peter Carey said it had become "an exercise in global corporate branding".</p>.<p>The Booker is also notorious for clashes on the jury as well as the snobbery surrounding it. Some critics dismissed the 2011 shortlist as "too readable".</p>.<p>"Clockwork Orange" writer Anthony Burgess refused to attend the ceremony in 1980 unless he won. He didn't and William Golding took home the money.</p>.<p>Nor were all winners happy. John Berger gave half his prize to the Black Panther movement in 1972 and tore a strip off the sponsors for "exploiting the Caribbean".</p>.<p>The prize was launched in 1969 by British publishers trying to match the glamour of France's Prix Goncourt, with sponsorship from grocery wholesaler Booker.</p>.<p>It was renamed The Man Booker Prize in 2002 in a nod to the hedge fund that took over sponsorship.</p>.<p>In 2019 it reverted to its original name when US charity Crankstart Foundation, founded by Silicon Valley billionaires, became the funder.</p>.<p>The five-person judging panel have several months to go through scores of books to settle on around a dozen candidates. This is whittled down to a shortlist of six and then a single winner.</p>.<p>For this year's award, 151 books were submitted.</p>.<p>In 2016 a separate £50,000 International Booker was introduced for a work of fiction translated into English, with money being divided between author and translator.</p>
<p>The Booker Prize for fiction is one of the world's top literary awards, making the names of writers from Salman Rushdie to Margaret Atwood and Hilary Mantel.</p>.<p>The latest winner -- chosen from the most diverse shortlist in its five-decade history -- will be announced Thursday at a ceremony featuring former US president Barack Obama in London.</p>.<p>Here is a recap of the prize's highs and lows:</p>.<p>The prize is for a work of fiction originally written in English and published in the UK.</p>.<p>The winner gets £50,000 (about $65,000, 57,000 euros). While well below the roughly $930,000 for the Nobel Prize for Literature, it tops the Pulitzer's $15,000 purse.</p>.<p>France's Goncourt offers a symbolic 10 euros ($11).</p>.<p>But sales of the winning book -- and often those on the shortlist -- skyrocket, with the Booker also promising "guaranteed international recognition".</p>.<p>The Booker sparked controversy from the start but there was consternation in Britain when the prize was opened to American writers in 2014.</p>.<p>Previously it had been reserved to authors from Britain, Ireland, Commonwealth countries and Zimbabwe.</p>.<p>The "dice are now loaded against UK authors," complained novelist and former judge Susan Hill.</p>.<p>Australia's two-time winner Peter Carey said it had become "an exercise in global corporate branding".</p>.<p>The Booker is also notorious for clashes on the jury as well as the snobbery surrounding it. Some critics dismissed the 2011 shortlist as "too readable".</p>.<p>"Clockwork Orange" writer Anthony Burgess refused to attend the ceremony in 1980 unless he won. He didn't and William Golding took home the money.</p>.<p>Nor were all winners happy. John Berger gave half his prize to the Black Panther movement in 1972 and tore a strip off the sponsors for "exploiting the Caribbean".</p>.<p>The prize was launched in 1969 by British publishers trying to match the glamour of France's Prix Goncourt, with sponsorship from grocery wholesaler Booker.</p>.<p>It was renamed The Man Booker Prize in 2002 in a nod to the hedge fund that took over sponsorship.</p>.<p>In 2019 it reverted to its original name when US charity Crankstart Foundation, founded by Silicon Valley billionaires, became the funder.</p>.<p>The five-person judging panel have several months to go through scores of books to settle on around a dozen candidates. This is whittled down to a shortlist of six and then a single winner.</p>.<p>For this year's award, 151 books were submitted.</p>.<p>In 2016 a separate £50,000 International Booker was introduced for a work of fiction translated into English, with money being divided between author and translator.</p>