The Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize is thrilled to announce the 2026 judging panel.

Irenosen Okojie

Irenosen Okojie is an award winning Nigerian British author whose work pushes the boundaries of form, language and ideas. Her novels, Curandera, Butterfly Fish, short story collections, Speak Gigantular and Nudibranch, have won and been nominated for multiple awards. Her writing has been featured in The New York Times, Vanity Fair, The Observer, The Guardian and The Huffington Post.  She co-presented the BBC's Turn Up for The Books podcast, alongside Simon Savidge and Bastille frontman Dan Smith. Her work has been optioned for the screen. She has judged various literary prizes including the BBC National Short Story Award and the Dublin Literary Award. She was a judge for the 2023 Women's Prize for Fiction. Formerly the Vice Chair of the Royal Society of Literature, she was awarded an MBE For Services to Literature in 2021 and selected as a visionary talent in The Next 25 Visionaries to Watch list. She is the director and founder of Black to the Future Festival.

Irenosen Okojie is the Chair of the 2026 Judging Panel.

Instagram: @irenosenokojie

Joe Dunthorne

Joe Dunthorne is a poet and novelist. His debut novel, Submarine, was translated into fifteen languages and made into an award-winning film. His second novel, Wild Abandon, won the Royal Society of Literature’s Encore Award. His debut poetry collection, O Positive, was published by Faber & Faber in 2019. His latest book, Children of Radium – a memoir about family and chemical weapons – was published in April 2025 and was adapted as a podcast for BBC Radio 4. He was born in Swansea and lives in London. [Photo credit: Tom Medwell]

Instagram: @joe_dunthorne

Nidhi Zak/Aria Eipe

Nidhi Zak/Aria Eipe is a poet, pacifist and fabulist. Auguries of a Minor God, her first collection, (Faber, 2021) was a finalist for the Dylan Thomas Prize, John Pollard Foundation International Poetry Prize, Michael Murphy Memorial Prize and the Butler Literary Award, and chosen as a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, National Poetry Day Recommendation, Shakespeare & Co. Year of Reading Selection, and a Book of the Year by both The Irish Times and The Irish Independent. She was appointed the Rooney Writer-in-Residence at Trinity College Dublin (2023), Literature Ireland Artist-in-Residence at Centre Culturel Irlandais Paris (2024), and the Heaney-Miłosz Writer-in-Residence in Kraków (2025). She serves as a member of the Expert Advisory Committee to Culture Ireland and the board of the Dublin Book Festival. [Photo credit: Leo Byrne]

X: @AriaEipe

Prajwal Parajuly

Prajwal Parajuly is the author of The Gurkha’s Daughter: Stories and Land Where I Flee, a novel. Prajwal’s works have been nominated for the Dylan Thomas Prize and the Mogford Prize in the UK, the Emile Guimet Prize and the First Novel Prize in France, and The Story Prize in the US. Land Where I Flee also won the Prix Littéraire Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie Franco-Indienne 2024. Prajwal teaches fiction at Krea University in South India and lives between New York and Sri City. Karma and Lola, his children’s book, is forthcoming from Tate Books in late 2026.

Instagram: @prajwalparajuly

Eley Williams (credit: Alice Zoo)

Eley Williams is the author of the short story collection Attrib. - awarded both the Republic of Consciousness Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize - and the Betty Trask Award-winning novel The Liar’s Dictionary. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and lives in Oxfordshire. (Photo credit: Alice Zoo)

Instagram: @giantratsumatra

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