The Booker Prize has long been a barometer of literary taste, but this year’s award has caused a rupture within the British literary establishment. The winning novel, a work centred on the politics and poetics of food, has drawn both acclaim and consternation from judges, critics and authors. Some have praised the work for its inventive structure and cultural commentary, while others argue the prize has strayed too far from its traditional appreciation of narrative craft.
The novel, set between a Michelin-starred kitchen in London and a subsistence farm in sub-Saharan Africa, uses food as a lens through which to explore scarcity, excess and cultural identity. The author, a former restaurant critic, interviewed farmers, chefs and gastronomes over five years to build a work that blurs fiction with reportage. Judges described the work as a ‘radical reimagining’ of what a novel can be, applauding its ability to treat a subject often seen as frivolous with gravity and grace.
Critics, however, have questioned whether the book is a novel at all. ‘It reads like a long-form essay with fictional interludes,’ one jury member said in a private conversation. ‘There is a difference between plot and a sequence of tasting menus.’ The Booker’s rules require the winner to be a novel, but the definition of the form has become increasingly elastic in recent years, with memoir and journalism frequently blurring into fictional territory. Some within the literary establishment fear this trend dilutes the novel’s distinct power.
The prize’s decision also reflects broader cultural shifts. Food writing has gained academic legitimacy, with university departments now studying cuisine as a marker of social stratification and globalisation. The winning novel engages with these debates directly, weaving references to food justice, colonial history and molecular gastronomy. But for traditionalists, the book’s intellectual scaffolding overshadows its emotional resonance. ‘I left the book feeling educated, not moved,’ one literary critic wrote in a prominent broadsheet.
Despite the controversy, the book has sold briskly, with some bookshops reporting it as their bestselling title since the prize was announced. Its publisher has ordered a second print run of 100,000 copies. For the author, the win validates a decade of work, though they have expressed unease about being ‘reduced to the food writer label.’ The Booker Prize, they said in an interview, is a platform to ‘show that a subject can be both intimate and geopolitical, personal and planetary.’
The split within the establishment is unlikely to heal soon. Some judges have publicly defended the choice, calling it a necessary corrective to a genre that has historically ignored material life. Others, including past winners of the prize, have remained silent, a sign of the discomfort the decision has caused. The debate now centres on what the novel should do: depict interior lives or report on systemic conditions? The winning book forces that question into the open, and the British literary world seems unready for the answer.








