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← Back to all issuesGranta 170: Winners
Winter 2025
Exploring a world ruled by competition and conflict, Granta 170: Winners, returns to sports writing.
Featuring essays by Nico Walker, Declan Ryan, Clare Bucknell and Owen Hatherley on the Isle of Wight.
Fiction by Caryl Churchill, Mircea Cărtărescu, Kathryn Scanlan, Edward Salem, Benjamin Nugent and K Patrick.
As well as photography by An-My Lê, Myriam Boulos, Tereza Červeňová and Prarthna Singh (introduced by Snigdha Poonam).
Image © Getty, Defensive back Deion Sanders poses with his 1988 Jim Thorpe Award at Doak Campbell Stadium, Florida State University
From this Issue
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
Introduction
Thomas Meaney
‘Everybody knows a game is not worth watching unless the players are trying to win.’
Thomas Meaney introduces the issue.
Fiction|Granta 170
Fiction|Granta 170
A Good Day
Caryl Churchill
‘I suddenly had one of those I can’t find words for it one of those moments of joy I suppose it is.’
Fiction by Caryl Churchill.
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
Real Tennis
Clare Bucknell
‘Real tennis players like to say that theirs is the only proper racket sport because the rest aren’t difficult enough.’
Clare Bucknell on a historical form of tennis.
Art & Photography|Granta 170
Art & Photography|Granta 170
Events Ashore
An-My Lê
‘Designed to face down conventional enemies, it hasn’t won a war since 1991.’
An-My Lê photographs the United States military, introduced by Granta.
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
Mucker Play
Nico Walker
‘When you said so loudly that you were the best, that you were worth the top dollar, then not just every game but every play became important.’
Nico Walker on the rise and fall of American football, from Jim Thorpe to Deion Sanders.
Fiction|Granta 170
Fiction|Granta 170
Round One
Benjamin Nugent
‘On the day the doctors extracted the eggs from her ovaries, he would have to go into a room in the hospital and produce.’
Fiction by Benjamin Nugent.
Art & Photography|Granta 170
Art & Photography|Granta 170
England’s Other Island
Owen Hatherley & Tereza Červeňová
‘A Victorian summer utopia perpetually falling into dereliction and desuetude.’
Owen Hatherley on the Isle of Wight, with photography by Tereza Červeňová.
Fiction|Granta 170
Fiction|Granta 170
Troubadour
Edward Salem
‘There were always too many white activists and upper-class European NGO workers, foreign queers and queer adjacents who were there for the anecdote, hoping to bed a native before their visa ended.’
Fiction by Edward Salem.
Art & Photography|Granta 170
Art & Photography|Granta 170
Bombed in Beirut
Myriam Boulos
‘What to do as a photographer in a war where even simple family portraits have become trophies?’
Myriam Boulos photographs displaced workers in Beirut.
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
Essays & Memoir|Granta 170
The Hurt Business
Declan Ryan
‘Honour, or anything approaching it, sits vanishingly low on the priority list.’
Declan Ryan on boxing and the fight between Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois.
Fiction|Granta 170
Fiction|Granta 170
The First Person
Kathryn Scanlan
‘I picked up a dry leaf, and when the caterpillar climbed aboard, I carried the leaf to the safety of the grass and set it down at the base of a tree.’
Fiction by Kathryn Scanlan.
Art & Photography|Granta 170
Art & Photography|Granta 170
Champion
Prarthna Singh & Snigdha Poonam
‘As Prarthna took photographs, I stood in the doorway watching the school-age girls with taut muscles and intense focus lock in bouts across the length of the hall.’
Snigdha Poonam on wrestling and the photography of Prarthna Singh.
Fiction|Granta 170
Fiction|Granta 170
The Dance
Mircea Cărtărescu
‘In the center of the palace was the Exit, blocked by a ferocious guardian, whom none could pass.’
Fiction by Mircea Cărtărescu, translated by Sean Cotter.
The Online Edition
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Keep Up
John Patrick McHugh
‘I deployed my body against an opponent like a blunt and effective instrument.’
John Patrick McHugh on playing Gaelic football.
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Keep Up
Jonny Thakkar
‘Following United rarely brings me any great joy and most often it depresses me. If I could disengage, I would.’
Jonny Thakkar on Manchester United.
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Keep Up
Saba Sams
‘I was not good at sports because I would not do sports because I did not have the body for sports because I would not do sports.’
Saba Sams on girlhood, embodiment and avoiding sports.
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Keep Up
Mary Wellesley
‘An intense workout is an ecstasy of punishment packaged as self-improvement.’
Mary Wellesley on exercise, ritual and Barry’s Bootcamp.
Essays & Memoir|The Online Edition
Keep Up
Kevin Brazil
‘Feelings can be very obscure but numbers never lie.’
Kevin Brazil on metrics, obsession and fitness.
Fiction|The Online Edition
The Cage
Tong Wei-Ger
‘The islanders held him in a large dog cage under a banyan tree by the village square, awaiting the day when someone would convey him to a prison camp.’
Fiction by Tong Wei-Ger, translated by Tony Hao.
Podcasts|The Online Edition
Podcast | Nico Walker
Nico Walker
‘The military recruits around football – they try to pick up the surplus player population. You couldn't make it on the college team? Well, you know, this is kind of similar. Both are violent.’
Nico Walker on American football.
Poetry|The Online Edition
John Cena
Dane Holt
‘Everything you do you do precisely.’
A poem by Dane Holt.
Podcasts|The Online Edition
Podcast | Declan Ryan
Declan Ryan
‘Some of these bigger characters, Muhammad Ali or Lennox Lewis, they can become these mythologic, mythological characters, or these godlike figures.’
Declan Ryan on contemporary boxing.