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enough to hold my book. thanked her British publisher, Granta, for protecting her from feeling the commercial pressures around a tome that could be seen as publisher nightmare. is beautifully intricate without being fussy, Macfarlane said. is experimental but does not by any means neglect the traditional virtues of storytelling. had been bookmakers joint favourite among the six prize finalists, alongside British novelist Jim Crace, for his rural parable Harvest.Catton received her trophy, which comes with a 50,000 pound ($80,000) check, from Prince Charles wife, Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, during a dinner ceremony at London medieval Guildhall.Catton was born in London, Ont., while her father was studying at the University of Western Ontario but left for New Zealand when she was six years old.Luminaries centres on a man named Walter Moody who comes to a New Zealand prospecting town in 1866 and finds himself immersed in a web of saloons, seances and skullduggery.The book elaborate narrative is structured according to astrological charts: It consists of 12 sections, each half the length of the last, from a 360 page opener to a final chapter of a single page.Macfarlane said the novel place in a culture which is utterly capitalized and focused on money, but also dwells on tenderness and love.He said the panel of five judges met for two hours brief by Booker standards to choose the winner, which was decided without a vote. blood was spilled in the judging, he said.Catton, who was 25 when she started writing the book and 27 when she finished it, has published just one previous novel.