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    This is the Winner of the 2026 International Booker Prize

    AdminBy AdminMay 20, 2026 Books
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    This is the Winner of the 2026 International Booker Prize

    Learn about the winner of the 2026 International Booker Prize, AI allegations against short story prize winners, a new partnership between the StoryGraph and Kobo, and more in today’s round-up of literary headlines.

    The 2026 International Booker Prize Winner is Taiwan Travelogue

    Taiwan Travelogue, written by Yáng Shuāng-zǐ and translated by Lin King, is this year’s winner of the 2026 International Booker Prize. If that title sounds familiar, it may be because it also won the 2024 National Book Award for translated literature. It’s the first book translated from Mandarin Chinese to win the International Booker Prize, as well as the first winner by a Taiwanese author. If that’s piqued your curiosity, the Booker Prize has a guide to everything you need to know about Taiwan Travelogue, an interview with the author and translator, a reading guide, and an extract from the novel. This is one I’ve been meaning to read for ages, so I’m glad that I placed my library hold before this news came out!

    Are AI Allegations the New Normal for Literary Prizes?

    Three of the five stories shortlisted for the 2026 Commonwealth Short Story Prize have been accused of being AI-generated. It began with one story getting attention for having some hallmarks of AI writing, as well as being flagged as 100% AI-generated in (fallible) AI detection software. Now, two of the other shortlisted stories have also been accused of being partially AI written. Wired is framing this as a the new normal. It’s hard to know how to navigate these accusations: AI-written text is a legitimate concern, especially when cash prizes are involved—but it’s also very difficult to tell for sure if AI is involved, and I don’t want to torpedo a new writer’s career because they use em dashes or parallel sentence structure.

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    Meanwhile, Olga Tokarczuk has issued a statement about her use of AI. Specifically, she says, “None of my texts, including the novel that will appear in Polish this fall, has been written with the help of artificial intelligence—except for using it as a tool for faster preliminary research.” This controversy has opened up another can of worms. While many (most?) readers avoid AI-written books, what counts as AI-written? Are books edited by AI acceptable? What about when used in research? Tools like Grammarly are also AI—is that a dealbreaker for readers? I expect this conversation is about to get even messier.

    The StoryGraph is Being Integrated in Kobo eReaders

    Since Amazon bought Goodreads, they’ve been integrating Kindle and Goodreads together. Now, the StoryGraph is partnering up with Kobo in a similar integration. Starting in June, your progress will by synced on the StoryGraph: once you finish a book on your Kobo, it will be added to your Read shelf on the StoryGraph. The aim is for Kobo users to seamlessly participate in the StoryGraph challenges, reading streaks, and community features. Given Kobo’s status as the Kindle alternative, and the StoryGraph as the Goodreads alternative, this seems like a great partnership, especially for readers avoiding Amazon.

    Read Harder This AAPI Heritage Month

    May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month! To celebrate, I’ve curated a list of fantastic books by AAPI authors that also check off tasks on the 2026 Read Harder Challenge. We have a nonbinary fantasy series, an anti-colonialist gothic novel, a Chinese American romantasy book, a Native Hawaiian picture book, and more to choose from. Join All Access to read the full post!

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