Philip Roth, the much-lauded author of Portnoy's Complaint, has won the biennial Man Booker International Prize today.
Roth, whose work includes his noted 1959 debut Goodbye, Columbus, has also won the Pulitzer Prize for American Pastoral, featuring favoured narrator Nathan Zuckerman.
The Man Booker International prize, announced during the Sydney Writers' Festival, is worth £60,000 (€68,000) for the winner, and living authors whose works of fiction are either originally in English or generally available in English translation are eligible.
It honours a writer's body of work as opposed to the annual Man Booker Prize for Fiction, which is awarded for a single book.
Other nominees for the award included Rohinton Mistry, Philip Pullman and Anne Tyler.
British author John LeCarre, known for spy classics such as The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, had rejected his nomination, saying he did not compete for literary prizes, but the judges kept him on the shortlist anyway, citing their admiration for his work.
Chinese writers featured in the 2011 shortlist for the first time in the form of Wang Anyi, who wrote The Song of Everlasting Sorrow published in 1996, and Su Tong, whose novella Wives and Concubines was the basis of the screenplay for the Oscar-nominated movie Raise the Red Lantern.
Previous winners of the award were Canadian writer Alice Munro (2009), Nigeria's Chinua Achebe (2007), and Albanian Ismail Kadare, who scooped the inaugural prize in 2005.
The prize will be awarded at a ceremony in London on June 28th.
Reuters