David Szalay Wins the 2025 Booker Prize for Flesh: A Landmark for Hungarian-British Literature
In a landmark literary moment, David Szalay, the Hungarian-British author known for his piercing explorations of modern existence, has won the 2025 Booker Prize for his sixth novel, Flesh. The announcement was made at a glittering ceremony at Old Billingsgate in London, where Szalay received the prestigious £50,000 prize and the Booker trophy from last year’s winner, Samantha Harvey.
The judges hailed Flesh as “a hypnotically tense and compelling novel that becomes an astonishingly moving portrait of a man’s life.” With this win, Szalay becomes the first author of Hungarian heritage to clinch the coveted prize.
David Szalay’s life mirrors the cosmopolitan nature of his fiction.
This transnational background deeply informs his storytelling, often touching on themes of identity, displacement, globalization, and belonging.
Szalay’s literary career began with London and the South-East, which won both the Betty Trask Award and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. His 2016 work, All That Man Is, earned him his first Booker shortlisting and the Gordon Burn Prize. He was also included in Granta’s “Best of Young British Novelists” (2013) list, cementing his reputation as one of Britain’s leading literary talents.
Flesh begins with the story of István, a 15-year-old boy growing up in a modest Hungarian housing estate. His life takes a sharp turn after a secret, unsettling relationship with an older, married neighbor — a connection that shapes the trajectory of his adult life.
As the narrative spans decades, István’s journey takes him from military life to the heart of London’s elite society. Along the way, he grapples with power, wealth, intimacy, and moral decay.
Szalay’s sparse, hypnotic prose captures the tension between human desire and detachment, asking profound questions about what truly drives a life and what ultimately destroys it.
The tone oscillates between dark introspection and philosophical detachment, drawing comparisons to the works of Albert Camus and Ian McEwan.
The 2025 Booker Prize judges, chaired by Irish novelist Roddy Doyle, praised Flesh for its originality and narrative control.
Other shortlisted works included,
Each shortlisted author received £2,500 and a specially bound edition of their book.
Kiran Desai, who previously won the Booker Prize in 2006 for The Inheritance of Loss, narrowly missed a historic second win with her novel The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny.
Desai’s work was described as,
“An intimate and expansive epic about two people finding a pathway to love and each other… Rich in meditations about class, race, and nationhood.”
Her 667-page novel reflects a global love story that bridges India and America, tradition and modernity — highlighting the complexities of relationships in the 21st century.
For Szalay, Flesh marks both a personal and artistic triumph. During his acceptance speech, he revealed that the project began after abandoning another manuscript that no longer resonated with him. He described Flesh as “a risky and deeply personal work,” given its raw content and provocative title.
With this win, Szalay’s readership is set to expand globally, and Flesh is already being hailed as a modern classic — a mirror to the disquieting moral landscapes of our time.
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