Authors Naomi Alderman and Anthony Horowitz have been appointed Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature in a ceremony in Bloomsbury on Monday evening.
Alderman, 43, whose book āThe Powerā last year won the prestigious Baileyās Prize for womenās literature, and prolific author Horowitz, 63, were two of 31 new Fellows introduced to the Society this year.
Fellowship election is described as a āuniquely prestigious literary honour, awarded by writers to writersā and the ceremony sees newly introduced Fellows signing the RSL roll book using the pens of either T S Eliot, Byron or George Eliot.
āThe Powerā has been hailed as a āclassic of the futureā and is set in an imagined future, in which girls and women can kill men with a single touch, by sending electrical bolts through their fingers.
Aldermanās academic father, Geoffrey, is an expert on Anglo-Jewry and lectures at the University of Buckingham. He was the lone Zionist academic to attend an anti-Israel conference in Cork last year.
Horowitz, who was born in Stanmore, is best known for his āAlex Powersā series, āThe Diamond Brothersā series and his TV script-writing for ITV productions including āFoyleās Warā and āAgatha Christieās Poirot.ā
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