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Lessing receives her Nobel
31/01/2008 09:47  - (SA)  

Doris Lessing holds up the 2007 Nobel Prize for Literature medal that she received during a special ceremony in London. (Matt Dunham, AP)
  • Nobel winner slams Mugabe
  • Lessing too ill for Nobel gala
  • Doris Lessing wins Nobel Prize
  • London - Nobel literature laureate Doris Lessing, who greeted news of her victory with the words, "I couldn't care less," received her prize on Wednesday night at a champagne reception in London.

    The 88-year-old writer was still not entirely overwhelmed by the honour.

    "There isn't anywhere to go from here, is there?" she said, before thinking of one more accolade: "I could receive a pat on the head from the pope."

    Lessing, whose back problems prevented her from travelling to Stockholm for the official Nobel prize-giving ceremony on December 10, was given the gold Nobel prize by Swedish Ambassador Staffan Carlsson amid the Old Master paintings of the Wallace Collection art gallery in London.

    Carlsson called her "forever young and wise, old and foolish ... the least ingratiating of writers."

    Born in Persia - now Iran - and raised in what is now Zimbabwe, Lessing drew on her experiences in colonial Africa for her debut novel, The Grass is Singing, published in 1950.

    Her most influential book is probably The Golden Notebook, published in 1962 and considered a feminist classic.

    'Scepticism, fire and visionary power'

    The author of more than 50 novels, volumes of short stories, memoirs and plays, Lessing was announced as the 2007 Nobel Literature laureate in October.

    The Swedish Academy, which awards the 10 million kronor ($1.5m) prize, praised her "scepticism, fire and visionary power."

    Lessing was both sceptical and fiery when told she had won by reporters waiting outside her London house.

    "Oh Christ, I couldn't care less," she said. "This has been going on for 30 years.

    "I've won all the prizes in Europe, every bloody one, so I'm delighted to win them all. It's a royal flush."

    Lessing has long been known for her fierce and often contrary opinions.

    In October, she told a Spanish newspaper that the September 11 2001, attacks were "neither as terrible nor as extraordinary" as many people think.

    "September 11 was terrible, but if one goes back over the history of the IRA, what happened to the Americans wasn't that terrible," she told El Pais.

    'On Not Winning the Nobel Prize'

    Her Nobel acceptance speech - delivered in Stockholm last month by her publisher, Nicholas Pearson - was titled "On Not Winning the Nobel Prize."

    In it she implored society to remember the importance of stories and books, despite a host of threats - from poverty and poor government in Zimbabwe to the internet and consumer culture in the West.

    "We have a treasure-house - a treasure - of literature, going back to the Egyptians, the Greeks, the Romans. It is all there, this wealth of literature, to be discovered again and again by whoever is lucky enough to come on it," she said. "Suppose it did not exist. How impoverished, how empty we would be."

    Lessing's publisher, HarperCollins, said it was donating 10 000 books - including copies of three of Lessing's novels - to Zimbabwean schools in recognition of the author's achievement.

    "We hope that the donation will be a fitting tribute to her unique talent and passion and that the books will inspire Zimbabwean schoolchildren for generations to come," said Victoria Barnsley, chief executive of HarperCollins UK.

     
     

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