Mary Beard to Chair Panel of Literary Giants: A Diverse Lineup for the 2026 Booker Prize.
A stellar group of judges has been announced for the prestigious 2026 Booker Prize. The esteemed chair, Mary Beard, a renowned classicist and broadcaster, will lead a panel featuring Jarvis Cocker, Patricia Lockwood, Raymond Antrobus, and Rebecca Liu.
For Cocker, who rose to fame as the frontman of Pulp in the 1990s, this marks his first foray into judging a major literary prize. A lyric collection and memoir are among his published works. Beard, meanwhile, will bring her expertise on ancient history to the panel, which will consider long-form fiction written by authors from any nationality and published between October 2025 and September 2026.
Beard herself admitted that she has "a little apprehension" about speeding up, given her self-described slow reading pace. Wood, CEO of the Booker Prize Foundation, noted that the judging panel would tackle broader questions: "What is a novel's role in relation to the past? What can the imagination do with facts?"
The prize will soon be open for submissions from publishers. A longlist of around 12-13 books is expected by July 28, and then a shortlist of six, with the winner announced in November, will take home Β£50,000 while each shortlisted author receives Β£2,500.
The panel's diversity promises to shed light on contemporary fiction, exploring its connections to history and mythology.
A stellar group of judges has been announced for the prestigious 2026 Booker Prize. The esteemed chair, Mary Beard, a renowned classicist and broadcaster, will lead a panel featuring Jarvis Cocker, Patricia Lockwood, Raymond Antrobus, and Rebecca Liu.
For Cocker, who rose to fame as the frontman of Pulp in the 1990s, this marks his first foray into judging a major literary prize. A lyric collection and memoir are among his published works. Beard, meanwhile, will bring her expertise on ancient history to the panel, which will consider long-form fiction written by authors from any nationality and published between October 2025 and September 2026.
Beard herself admitted that she has "a little apprehension" about speeding up, given her self-described slow reading pace. Wood, CEO of the Booker Prize Foundation, noted that the judging panel would tackle broader questions: "What is a novel's role in relation to the past? What can the imagination do with facts?"
The prize will soon be open for submissions from publishers. A longlist of around 12-13 books is expected by July 28, and then a shortlist of six, with the winner announced in November, will take home Β£50,000 while each shortlisted author receives Β£2,500.
The panel's diversity promises to shed light on contemporary fiction, exploring its connections to history and mythology.