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Baillie Gifford Prize shortlist for best non-fiction announced

Jack The Ripper and Lucian Freud are subjects found in this year’s shortlist.
Jack The Ripper and Lucian Freud are subjects found in this year’s shortlist. Jack The Ripper and Lucian Freud are subjects found in this year’s shortlist.

The shortlist for the Baillie Gifford Prize celebrating the best of best non-fiction has been announced.

Works ranging from a biography of Lucian Freud to profiles of the women murdered by Jack The Ripper are in contention for the annual honour.

Six books have been shortlisted for the £50,000 prize, which is awarded for the best work of non-fiction, as judged by an expert panel.

William Feaver has been selected for his work The Lives Of Lucian Freud: Youth, and Hallie Rubenhold for The Five: The Untold Lives Of The Women Killed by Jack the Ripper.

Maoism: A Global History, by Julia Lovell, Guest House For Young Widows, by Azadeh Moaveni, Casey Cep’s Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, And The Last Trial Of Harper Lee, and Laura Cummin’s On Chapel Sands make up the rest of the shortlist.

Stig Abell, chairman of judges, said: “We have picked six books from twelve and it was a gloriously testing, combative process, full of passionate arguments and the changing of minds, concessions and hold-outs.

“I think we’ve ended up with a shortlist full of brilliance and verve, huge scope and evocative detail. I urge everyone to get reading these books.

“They will not be disappointed. The winner, when it emerges, will have beaten some magnificent competition.”

The shortlist has been chosen by a panel chaired by Abell, with Dr Myriam Francois, Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, Frances Wilson, Petina Gappah and Dr Alexander Van Tulleken.

The winner of the 2019 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction will be announced on November 19 at the Science Museum in London.