Singer Morrissey's debut novel wins 'Bad Sex' prize

British singer-songwriter Morrissey performs during the International Song Festival in Vina del Mar city. REUTERS/Eliseo Fernandez

By Michael Roddy LONDON (Reuters) - British pop singer Morrissey's debut novel, "List of the Lost", won the award for the worst sex scene of the year on Tuesday for a passage in which two characters roll together into "one giggling snowball of full-figured copulation". Morrissey, one-time lead singer of The Smiths, was picked for the dubious distinction of winning the tongue-in-cheek Bad Sex in Fiction Award by Britain's Literary Review magazine for his Penguin Classic book about four Boston relay runners who are cursed by an old man. "The judges were swayed by an ecstatic scene involving Ezra, one of the athletes, and his plucky girlfriend, Eliza," the judges said, citing a description of the two "screaming and shouting as they playfully bit and pulled at each other in a dangerous and clamorous rollercoaster coil of sexually violent rotation ..." The review, which announced the prize at a ceremony in London, said the singer, whose full name is Steven Patrick Morrissey, "was unable to attend due to touring commitments and was unavailable for comment". Morrissey, who is a leader in the indie pop movement, was chosen from a seven-book shortlist that included Erica Jong's "Fear of Dying" and "The Wire" screenwriter George Pelecanos's "The Martini Shot". The prize, whose stated purpose is “to draw attention to poorly written, perfunctory or redundant passages of sexual description in modern fiction, and to discourage them”, was established in 1993. In the past it has gone to such literary lions as Ben Okri, Norman Mailer and Tom Wolfe. The late American novelist John Updike is the only person to date to have won a Lifetime Achievement Award for passages of bad sex writing. (Reporting by Michael Roddy; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)