New Delhi
When it was announced that the winner of the 2021 Premio Planeta literary prize âworth one million euros â was the renowned female Spanish crime author, Cameron Mola, the audience, and the spectators worldwide had a shock of their life.
Three middle-aged men rose to the podium to collect the coveted award on Friday for the currently unreleased work âThe Beastâ.
Jorge DÃaz, AgustÃn MartÃnez, and Antonio Mercero were the writers who penned numerous best-selling crime thriller books under the pseudonym âCameron Molaâ.
They decided to write under the pseudonym for no âparticular reasonâ and without âconsideration of the nameâs genderâ.
âCarmen Mola is not, like all the lies we've been telling, a university professor,â DÃaz said shortly after accepting the Planeta prize, according to the Financial Times.
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âWe are three friends who one day four years ago decided to combine our talent to tell a story.â
Mola, which the trio showcased as a university professor and mother of three who wrote gritty crime drama on her off-time, has been praised for âherâ depiction of strong female protagonists, with her latest award-winning work focusing on the investigation of child murders in nineteenth-century Spain.
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Molaâs other works have also garnered acclaim, like "La Novia Gitana," which has been translated into 11 languages and will be developed into a television series.
Castille-La Mancha, a branch of Spain's Women's Institute, included her book âLa Nenaâ in a list of 50 feminist titles that help readers âunderstand the reality and experiences of women.â
âI donât know if a female pseudonym would sell more than a male one, I don't have the faintest idea, but I doubt it,â Mercero told Spain's El PaÃs newspaper. âWe didn't hide behind a woman, we hid behind a name.â
Notably, there have been past instances where women have gone to publish works under male pseudonyms to protect their identity and dodge social biases.
(With inputs from agencies)