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US author Hanya Yanagihara poses for a photograph at a photocall in London on October 12, 2015, ahead of tomorrow's announcement of the winner of the 2015 Man Booker Prize for Fiction. Hanya Yanagihara's 'A Little Life' is one of the six shortlisted books for this year's prize. Image Credit: AFP

London: A disturbing tale of male friendship which features graphic depictions of child sex abuse is favourite to win the annual Man Booker Prize for best novel, being awarded in London on Tuesday.

US author Hanya Yanagihara’s ‘A Little Life’ follows four young men after they graduate from college but focuses on the traumatic past of one of them, who was abused by monks as a child and self-harms.

The Guardian called the book, which is over 700 pages long, a “relentlessly harrowing human epic” while The New Yorker praised its “subversive brilliance”.

Yanagihara, who works as deputy editor of the New York Times Style Magazine as well as writing, said she wanted to show a group of male friends in New York because “everyone is on the run in some way” there.

“I structured the book so there are five turning points where the mood gets darker,” she told The Bookseller magazine in June. “Like taking a dial and giving it half a twist to the right.”

It is 6/4 favourite to win the £50,000 ($77,00, Dh279,595) first prize, followed by Briton Sunjeev Sahota’s ‘The Year of the Runaways’ at 9/2 and Jamaican Marlon James’s ‘A Brief History of Seven Killings’ at 6/1.

They are followed by ‘The Fishermen’ by Nigeria’s Chigozie Obioma at 10/1, American author Anne Tyler’s ‘A Spool of Blue Thread’ at 12/1 and British writer Tom McCarthy’s ‘Satin Island’ at 20/1.

The relative lack of established big-name authors on the shortlist has raised some eyebrows, though.

Salman Rushdie - whose ‘Midnight’s Children’ took the prize in 1981 and was judged best novel ever to do so in 1993 - said his days of winning were “gone”.

“If you look at the list this year, other than Anne Tyler there seems to be a desire to move away from established names,” Rushdie was quoted as saying in Monday’s Daily Telegraph.

“No [Kazuo] Ishiguro, no [Margaret] Attwood, no [Jonathan] Franzen… I haven’t been on a Booker Prize shortlist for 20 years, so those days are gone.”

Authors who were on the long list but failed to be shortlisted included Marilynne Robinson and Anne Enright.

The Man Booker Prize was previously open only to authors from Britain, Ireland, the Commonwealth and Zimbabwe but this is the second year it has been open to all nationalities.