Booker finalist Thien wins top Canada fiction prize

Author Madeleine Thien poses for photographs during a photo-call in London for the six Man Booker shortlisted fiction authors, on the eve of the prize giving in London, Britain October 24, 2016. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls - RTX2Q9MY

TORONTO (Reuters) - Man Booker Prize finalist Madeleine Thien on Monday won Canada's Giller Prize, the country's richest fiction award, for "Do Not Say We Have Nothing", about a young woman's flight from China after the Tiananmen Square protests. The C$100,000 ($74,700) prize was awarded in Toronto by a five-member jury. The jury wrote that they were entranced by the book's "detailed, layered, complex drama of classical musicians and their loved ones trying to survive two monstrous insults to their humanity: Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution in mid-twentieth century China and the Tiananmen Square massacre." The book had also been nominated for the Booker Prize, but last month lost out to American Paul Beatty's "The Sellout", a biting satire on race relations in the United States. (Reporting by Jeffrey Hodgson; Editing by Michael Perry)