It is not possible to add the new link because it would replace an existing, longer link.
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
*'''Nobel Prize''' |
*'''Nobel Prize''' |
||
Ten winners of the [[Nobel Prize for Literature]] have taken part: [[Günter Grass]] ([[1999 Nobel Prize in Literature|1999]]), [[Kazuo |
Ten winners of the [[Nobel Prize for Literature]] have taken part: [[Günter Grass]] ([[1999 Nobel Prize in Literature|1999]]), [[Kazuo]] Ishiguro ([[2017 Nobel Prize in Literature|2017]]), [[J.M.G. Le Clézio]] ([[2008 Nobel Prize in Literature|2008]]), [[Doris Lessing]] ([[2007 Nobel Prize in Literature|2007]]), [[Toni Morrison]] ([[1993 Nobel Prize in Literature|1993]]), [[V. S. Naipaul]] ([[2001 Nobel Prize in Literature|2001]]), [[Orhan Pamuk]] ([[2006 Nobel Prize in Literature|2006]]), [[Wole Soyinka]] ([[1986 Nobel Prize in Literature|1986]]), [[Mario Vargas Llosa]] ([[2010 Nobel Prize in Literature|2010]]) and [[Derek Walcott]] ([[1992 Nobel Prize in Literature|1992]]). |
||
*'''Booker Prize''' |
*'''Booker Prize''' |
||
Seventeen [[Booker Prize winners|winners of the Booker Prize]] have taken part: [[Margaret Atwood]] (2000), [[Julian Barnes]] (2011), [[A.S. Byatt]] (1990), [[Peter Carey (novelist)|Peter Carey]] (1988) & (2001), [[Kiran Desai]] (2006), [[Roddy Doyle]] (1993), [[Kazuo Ishiguro]] (1989), [[Howard Jacobson]] (2010), [[Thomas Keneally]] (1982), [[Penelope Lively]] (1987), [[Ian McEwan]] (1998), [[Yann Martel]] (2002), [[V. S. Naipaul]] (1971), [[Ben Okri]] (1991), [[Michael Ondaatje]] (1992), [[Arundhati Roy]] (1997), and [[Salman Rushdie]] (1981). |
Seventeen [[Booker Prize winners|winners of the Booker Prize]] have taken part: [[Margaret Atwood]] (2000), [[Julian Barnes]] (2011), [[A.S. Byatt]] (1990), [[Peter Carey (novelist)|Peter Carey]] (1988) & (2001), [[Kiran Desai]] (2006), [[Roddy Doyle]] (1993), [[Kazuo Ishiguro]] (1989), [[Howard Jacobson]] (2010), [[Thomas Keneally]] (1982), [[Penelope Lively]] (1987), [[Ian McEwan]] (1998), [[Yann Martel]] (2002), [[V. S. Naipaul]] (1971), [[Ben Okri]] (1991), [[Michael Ondaatje]] (1992), [[Arundhati Roy]] (1997), and [[Salman Rushdie]] (1981). |