Indian novelist Kiran Desai succeeded where her mother failed last night and won the Booker prize, the youngest woman ever to capture one of the world's most prestigious literary awards.
Desai, whose mother and fellow writer Anita was three times shortlisted for the Booker, won the £50,000 prize at her first attempt for her sweeping novel "The Inheritance of Loss". She has just turned 35.
"To my mother I owe a debt so profound. This book feels as much hers as it does mine," Desai said after accepting her prize.
"It was written in her company and in her wisdom and kindness," the overwhelmed author said. "I really owe her this book so enormously."
But she did not get to immediately share news of her triumph with her mother.
"She went to visit my uncle, her brother, who lives in a Tibetan refugee settlement in a village which has no phone and no television," she told reporters afterwards. "She is probably sleeping very peacefully right now."
"My mother told me never to be a writer as it is such a difficult profession. It is so hard," she added.
Desai, who divides her time between New York and New Delhi, said: "I have an Indian passport and given what the political climate has been in the United States, I feel more and more Indian."
Chairwoman of the judges Hermione Lee said: "It was a magnificent novel of humane breadth and wisdom, comic tenderness and powerful political acuteness."
Picking from a shortlist of relative unknowns after rejecting a string of literary heavyweights, Lee said "the winner was chosen after a long, passionate and generous debate".
The previous youngest woman winner had been Desai's fellow Indian Arundhati Roy, who won the prize in 1997 when just a month short of her 36th birthday.
The youngest ever winner was Ben Okri who landed the Booker in 1991 at the age of 32.
Desai's novel tells the story of an embittered judge who wants to retire in peace in his crumbling house in the Himalayas. But his life is turned upside down with the arrival of his orphaned granddaughter.
Desai, who was educated in India, England and the United States, took eight years to write the novel that has now catapulted her into the literary limelight.
She fought off stiff competition from Sarah Waters' "The Night Watch", Edward St Aubyn's "Mother's Milk," Kate Grenville's "The Secret River," M.J. Hyland's "Carry Me Down" and Hisham Matar's "In The Country of Men."