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International Prize for Arabic Fiction

The International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF), also known as "the Arabic Booker", is regarded as the most prestigious and important literary prize in the Arab world.

Rules and entry
Full Rules of Entry are available to view here. == Trustees ==
Trustees
Yasir Suleiman CBE, Professor of Arabic, University of Cambridge, Chair of Trustees • Evelyn Smith, Booker Prize Foundation, Company Secretary • Isobel Abulhoul OBE, CEO, Emirates Literature Foundation • Yassin Adnan, Moroccan journalist, broadcaster and writer • Abdulla Majed Al Ali, executive director of the UAE national archive, columnist, formerly involved in a number of cultural initiatives in the UAE, including the Sheikh Zayed Book Award, the Kalima Translation Project, the Abu Dhabi Book Fair and Abu Dhabi libraries • Nujoom Alghanem, poet, script writer and a multi-award-winning Emirati filmmaker • Rasheed El-Enany, Egyptian literary scholar, Professor Emeritus of the University of Exeter • Omar Ghobash, Emirati author, businessman, and diplomat • Rana Idriss, Director of publisher Dar al-Adab, Beirut • Michel S. Moushabeck, Founder and President of Interlink Publishing Group, Inc., writer, editor, and musician, USA • Zaki Nusseibeh, UAE Minister of State • Sherif-Joseph Rizk, Director of publishing house Dar al-Tanweer, Egypt • Ahdaf Soueif, Egyptian author and political and cultural commentator • Jonathan Taylor, former chair of the Booker Prize Foundation • Fleur Montanaro, Prize Administrator ==Winners and nominees==
Winners and nominees
= winner 2008 The winner was announced on 10 March 2008. The shortlist was announced on 29 January 2008, chosen from 131 entries. 2009 The winner was announced on 16 March 2009. The shortlist was announced on 10 December 2008. The longlist was announced on 11 November 2008, chosen from 121 entries. 2010 The winner was announced on 2 March 2010. The shortlist was announced on 15 December 2009. The longlist was announced on 17 November 2009, chosen from 115entries. 2011 & Raja'a Alem, joint winners of the 2011 prize The shortlist was announced 9 December 2010, chosen from a total of 123 submissions and a longlist of 16. The winners were announced on 14 March 2011, the eve of the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair. This marked the first time the award had been split, as well as the first female winner (Raja'a Alem). 2012 A total of 101 submissions from 15 countries were whittled down to a longlist of 13. This list was announced in November 2011. The final shortlist of six books was revealed on 11 January 2012. The winner was announced 27 March 2012. 2013 The longlist of 16 books was announced on 6 December 2012. The shortlist of six books was announced on 9 January 2013. The winner was announced on 23 April 2013. 2014 The longlist of 16 books was announced 7 January 2014. The shortlist of 6 books was announced 10 February 2014. The winner was announced 29 April 2014. 2015 On 13 February 2015 the shortlist was announced. The winner was announced 6 May 2015. 2016 The longlist was announced on 12 January 2016. The winner was announced 26 April 2016. 2017 The winner was announced 25 April 2017. 2018 The longlist was announced on 17 January 2018. The winner was announced 24 April 2018. 2019 The shortlist was announced on 5 February 2019, chosen from a total of 134 submissions from 9 Arab countries. The shortlist titles 2020 The winner was announced on 14 April 2020. The shortlist was announced on 4 February 2020. The longlist was announced on 17 December 2019, chosen from 128 entries. 2021 The longlist was chosen on 1 March 2021, chosen from 121 entries. The shortlist was announced on 29 March 2021 and the winner on 25 May 2021. 2025 The winner was announced on March the 24th 2025. ==Judges==
Judges
The judges since 2008 are listed below: 2008Feissal DarrajGhalia QabbaniMohammed BennisMohammed BerradaPaul StarkeySamuel Shimon 2009Fakhri SalehHartmut FaehndrichMohammad al-MurrRasheed El-EnanyYoumna el Eid 2010Taleb AlrefaiRaja' Ben SalamahSaif al-RahbiFrédéric LaGrange 2011Fadhil al-AzzawiMunira Al-FadhelIsabella Camera D'AfflittoAmjad NasserSaid Yaktine 2012Georges TarabichiMaudie BitarHoda ElsaddaHuda al-NaimiGonzalo Fernández Parrilla 2013Galal AminSobhi al-BoustanAli FerzatBarbara Michalak-PikulskaZahia Smail Salhi 2014Saad A. Albazei (Chair) • Ahmed AlfaitouriZhor GourramAbdullah IbrahimMehmet Hakki Suçin 2015Mourid Barghouti (Chair) • Ayman A. El-DesoukyParween HabibNajim A. KadhimKaoru Yamamoto 2019 • Chair: Charafdin Majdolin, Moroccan critic and academic • Fowziya Abu Khalid, Saudi Arabian poet, writer, academic and researcher i social and political issues • Zulaikha Aburisha, Jordanian poet and activist • Latif Zeitouni, Lebanese academic and literary critic • Zhang Hong Yi, Chinese translator and researcher 2020 • Chair: Muhsin al-Musawi, an Iraqi literary critic and Professor of Classical and Modern Arabic Literature, Comparative and Cultural Studies at Columbia University • Pierre Abi Saab, a Lebanese critic, journalist and co-founder of the Lebanese Al-Akhbar newspaper • Reem Magued, an Eqyptian broadcaster, television journalist and trainer in journalism and media • Amin Zaoui, an Algerian novelist who writes in both Arabic and French, and Professor of Comparative Literature and Contemporary Thought at the Central University of Algiers • Viktoria Zarytovskaya, a Russian academic, researcher and translator of numerous works of Arabic literature into Russian including Ahmed Saadawi's Frankenstein in Baghdad, winner of the prize in 2014 2021 • Chair: Chawki Bazih, Lebanese poet and author • Mohammed Ait Hanna, a Moroccan writer, translator and lecturer of Philosophy at the Regional Centre for Teaching Careers and Training in Casablanca • Safa Jubran, a lecturer of Arabic Language and Modern Literature at the University of San Paolo in Brazil • Ali Al-Muqri, a Yemeni writer twice longlisted for IPAF in 2009 and 2011 respectively • Ayesha Sultan, an Emirati author, journalist, founding director of Warrak Publishing House and Vice President of the Emirates Writers Union 2022 Shukri MabkhoutAshur EtwebiIman HumaydanSaadiah MufarrehBaian Rayhanova 2025 Mona BakerSaid BengradMaryam Al-HashimiSampsa PeltonenBilal Orfali ==Statistics==
Statistics
As of 2020, the following authors have been nominated at least three times: Three nominationsAntoine DouaihyInaam KachachiKhaled KhalifaRenée HayekYoussef Ziedan Four nominationsAmir Tag ElsirIbrahim NasrallahJabbour DouaihyRabee JaberWaciny Laredj Countries The countries with the most nominations are: • Egypt, 34 • Lebanon, 30 • Iraq, 22 • Syria, 20 Sudan, Eritrea and the UAE have one nomination each. ==IPAF Nadwa==
IPAF Nadwa
• For details of the annual writers' workshop, see International Prize for Arabic Fiction Nadwa. ==References==
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