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topic: Book Lists! > The Man Booker Prize 2009


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message 1: by Nathaniel (last edited Aug 03, 2009 06:34AM) (new)

2391677 The United Kingdom biggest fiction prize announced its long list a week ago.
http://www.themanbookerprize.com/prize/t...

The first four seem relatively well known, so I didn't post reviews, the others may be a little more obscure, so I posted reviews, where I could find them.

(Normally there is a little poetry amongst the group, but not this year.)

James Leever's book, Me Cheeta, looks.....interesting.

Last years winner was Aravind Adiga's White Tiger and two years ago it was Kiran Desai's The Inheritance of Loss.

A.S. Byatt - The Children's Book
J.M. Coetzee - Summertime
Colm Toibin - Brooklyn
William Trevor - Love and Summer


Adam Foulds - The Quickening Maze
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/may...

Sarah Hall - How to paint a dead man
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books...

Samantha Harvey - The Wilderness
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/12/arts/1...

James Lever - Me Cheeta
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entert...

Hilary Mantel - Wolf Hall
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/apr...

Simon Mawer - The Glass Room
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/jan...

Ed O'Loughlin - Not Untrue & Not Unkind
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/books/ar...

James Scudamore - Heliopolis
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/jan...

Sarah Waters - The Little Stranger
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/t...

I couldn't find when they publish the short list or announce the prize.


message 2: by Sophie (last edited Aug 03, 2009 08:31AM) (new)

1018073 The shortlist will be announced on 8 September 2009.
The winner will be announced on 6 October 2009.

For more info: Man Booker Prize 2009 dates.


message 3: by Nathaniel (last edited Aug 03, 2009 09:29AM) (new)

2391677 Reading Comprehension 1 - Nathaniel 0

(Nice job, Sophie.)


message 4: by Miss GP (new)

2140505 Has anyone read any of these, and if so, what did you think? I own Brooklyn, but know nothing about the others.


message 5: by MarBear (new)

1856301 Hi Miss GP. I have heard of the authors but not to the books. More books to add to my list. LOL!

Mary


message 6: by MarBear (new)

1856301 Hi Nataniel. Thank for posting this info. I've not read any of the books listed. Thanks for making me add more books to my ever growing list. We missed having you around.

mary


message 7: by Aileen (new)

2598685 Hi Nathaniel! Thanks for these posts! Like everyone else on this thread, my list of books to read is now a lot longer. =)

BTW I loved POSSESSION by A.S. Byatt and THE MASTER by Colm Toibin. Haven't read any of their other novels, but I'm gonna try the ones in this list out.


message 8: by Nathaniel (new)

2391677 Possession was great.

(Mary that's a great book group book.)

My favorite piece of trivia about the Booker was the Ruth Prawer Jhabvala won for Heat and Dust in '75 and then went on and wrote all those brilliant Merchant Ivory Films (Room With A View/Howards End/Remains of the Day.)

I've heard Toibin and Coetzee interviewed. Coetzee is especially amazing, but I've never read a page of either.


message 9: by Nathaniel (new)

2391677 "Me Cheeta," is apparently a comic autobiography of Tarzan's sidekick. (That could be a hoot.)

A good paragraph about E. R. Burrough's from a NY Times article today:
Before he died in 1950 Burroughs published about two dozen Tarzan potboilers, his fictional character becoming an increasingly fantastical figure, speaking a dozen languages while battling the teensy Minunians and dinosaurs. An easygoing guy with a fondness for golf who settled in what came to be called, thanks to him, Tarzana, Calif., Burroughs never bothered to set foot in Africa, which is why Tarzan also faced off against Asian tigers and killed lions by wrestling them into a full nelson. As Gore Vidal once phrased it, the author of Tarzan was “not one to compromise a vivid unconscious with dim reality.”


message 10: by Sophie (new)

1018073 Have you heard? There is a fun alternative to the Booker Prize... the Not the Booker Prize. And we can nominate a book.

Sound interesting? Check out the article in the Guardian: Not the Booker Prize

Need to think about my nominee, now.


message 11: by Mary (new)

1181579 Has anyone read any of these, and if so, what did you think?

I've read The Little Stranger. It was good but I am surprised it got nominated for the Mann Booker. I mean I wouldn't put it in the same class with some of the past winners, such as The White Tiger, Disgrace, or Life of Pi. But that's just me!


message 12: by Marilyn (new)

Nophoto-f-25x33 Mary wrote: "Has anyone read any of these, and if so, what did you think?

I've read The Little Stranger. It was good but I am surprised it got nominated for the Mann Booker. I mean I wouldn't ..."

Mary, I read that also because I always check out Man-Booker prize nominees. But I didn't think it was anyway good enough to be included on that list. Book was o.k. but if it was supposed to be a scary book it fell far short of that. And it certainly falls far short of what I consider prize material. So, it's not just you.




message 13: by Jenn (new)

1652682 I'm a big fan of the Man Booker prize. I find them to be much mroe engaging than Pulitzers. Not sure why that is. They are somehow edgier, a little more daring.


message 14: by Laura (new)

882116 I totally agree...have found some of my favorite books ever via the Booker lists. Inheritance of Loss was superb and I'm still waiting to read The White Tiger. I just ordered The Children's Hour by A. S. Byatt because it looked so intriguing.


message 15: by Nathaniel (last edited Sep 09, 2009 05:13AM) (new)

2391677 The Short List for the prize was announced yesterday

J. M. Coetzee "Summertime"
A. S. Byatt "The Children's Hour"
Sarah Winter "The Little Stranger"
Adam Foulds "The Quickening Maze"
Hilary Mantel "Wolf Hall"
Simon Mawer "The Glass Room"

If Coetzee wins he will be the first person to ever win the Prize three times. His other two wins were in 1983 (Life & Tiems of Michael K) and in 1999 (Disgrace).

They announce the winner Oct. 6.


message 16: by Jill (new)

1824106 I saw this come across the news headlines. I never knew they announced the 'nominees' like the academy awards. I always just heard who won literary prizes. Interesting.


message 17: by Maggie (new)

Nophoto-u-25x33 I've read The Little Stranger and thought it was excellent. No it wasn't scary but quite suspenseful(?) but it was beautifully written. A worthy winner.


message 18: by MarBear (new)

1856301 Nathaniel wrote: "The Short List for the prize was announced yesterday

J. M. Coetzee "Summertime"
A. S. Byatt "The Children's Hour"
Sarah Winter "The Little Stranger"
Adam Foulds "The Quickening Maze"
Hilary Mantel..."


Hi Nataniel. Thanks for posting this. I've only heard of one of the books. "The Children's Hour." Too many books and so little time.

mary


message 19: by Amalia (new)

1805692 Announced today- Hilary Mantel for "Wolf Hall".
Here's the piece from the NY Times.
http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/1...



message 20: by DJ (new)

2628150 Amalia,thanks for tie in link to NY Times.
Much Appreciated by a novice like me!
You`re a Doll!!!!


message 21: by Nathaniel (new)

2391677 The Booker is the weirdest literary prize. It never lands where you think it will. It almost deliberately seems to avoid high profile authors.


message 22: by Nathaniel (new)

2391677 Well, as a consolation to A.S. Byatt I went out and bought The Children's Book tonight.


message 23: by Ananya (new)

2787475 Amalia wrote: "Announced today- Hilary Mantel for "Wolf Hall".
Here's the piece from the NY Times.
http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/1...
"

Hey Amelia thanks for the link...it seems I didn't see the news. Wolf Hall does seem a very interesting bit of book !!?!!



message 24: by DJ (new)

2628150 Nathaniel wrote: "Well, as a consolation to A.S. Byatt I went out and bought The Children's Book tonight. "

Don`t go giving me ideas for reasons to buy books!I`m trying to be a good Girlthis month!!


message 25: by KarenLee (new)

1956582 Here's another link my husband found for me:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment...

It's an interview with one of the judges of the Booker and what the experience was like.


message 26: by Nathaniel (new)

2391677 132 books from April to, let's say September? Wow! Wow! Wow! Wow!




message 27: by Kimberly (new)

2669490 Wolf Hall sounds really interesting. I was pleasantly surprised that a historical fiction book of that type won. I definitely want to read it!


message 28: by DJ (new)

2628150 Must be Good.


message 29: by Nathaniel (new)

2391677 The Economist review of Wolf Hall
The Man Booker prizewinner
History today
Oct 8th 2009
From The Economist print edition

Wolf Hall. By Hilary Mantel. Henry Holt; 560 pages; $27. Fourth Estate; £18.99. Buy from Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk

THE winner of this year’s Man Booker fiction prize is an historical novel with a difference. Set during the reign of Henry VIII, “Wolf Hall” (which will be published in America next week) covers the period of the king’s divorce from Catherine of Aragon and marriage to Anne Boleyn, but stops short of Anne’s execution. The title refers to the family seat of the Seymours, whose daughter Jane would eventually supplant Anne as queen and give Henry the son he so wanted.


Hilary Mantel does not believe in a history of grand narratives and big climaxes. Instead, her aim is to recreate the texture of the day-to-day ebb and flow of events as if they were unfolding before her eyes. Her main protagonist is Thomas Cromwell. His rise from working-class obscurity to king’s righthand man has always fascinated historians as an exemplar of ruthless Tudor social mobility. But Ms Mantel eschews the usual damning view of Cromwell, called “Henry VIII’s most notorious minister” in a recent non-fiction biography.

This is not the first time she has humanised one of history’s villains: she made us empathise with Robespierre in “A Place of Greater Safety”. Cromwell, in her version, is still a calculating Machiavellian, but in his family life he is capable of intimacy and warmth, despite childhood abuse at the hands of his father and a misspent youth in which he killed a man.

History tells us that the wheel of fortune will turn—Cromwell’s own neck will end on the block—but this novel deals only with his rise. Ms Mantel leaves us awestruck by his administrative and political genius, his ability to keep so many balls in the air, his resilience under stress. At the same time, she undermines the popular view of the sainted Thomas More, who she shows to be vain, self-serving in his own martyrdom and nasty to his wife.

Whether we accept Ms Mantel’s reading of history or not, her characters have a lifeblood of their own, particularly the urbane Cardinal Wolsey. Even the most minor characters—a boatman on the river, say, retailing common gossip about Anne Boleyn’s sex life—have a Shakespearean vigour. Stylistically, her fly-on-the-wall approach is achieved through the sustained use of the historic present tense, of which she is a master. Her prose is muscular, avoiding cod Tudor dialogue and going for direct modern English. The result is Ms Mantel’s best novel yet.




message 30: by DJ (new)

2628150 Thanks Nathaniel...


message 31: by Kate (new)

2658790 I have this on my shelf if anyone is interested in a side read :)


message 32: by Nathaniel (last edited 19 days ago, 06:18PM) (new)

2391677 I just loaned my copy to a friend.


message 33: by Mary (new)

1181579 I just received my copy of Wolf Hall. Has anyone given it a go yet, and what do you think?


message 34: by Miss GP (new)

2140505 I can't WAIT to get that one and read it. It looks very good.


message 35: by Jennifer (new)

2635637
Hello!

I have added Wolf Hall to my amazon.ca wish list and will keep the fingers crossed! LOL! It sounds so good.


message 36: by Kate (last edited 15 days ago, 07:49PM) (new)

2658790 Maybe we could add as a side read thread ???
I will start it early new year.
I keep buying and buying knowing i wont be able to read them for some time *sigh*


message 37: by Amalia (new)

1805692 Kate, that's a great thought. I would definitely be in for it.


message 38: by Kate (new)

2658790 Ok great Amalia , i will set something up :)
Are you ok for early new year ?


message 39: by Amalia (new)

1805692 Yes, that's great timing for me. Thanks, Kate!


message 40: by Kate (new)

2658790 Ive added a thread incase anyone else who is reading now wants to discuss too :)


message 41: by Kate (last edited 11 days ago, 05:12PM) (new)

2658790 The list of winners & shorlisters 1969-2008
http://www.themanbookerprize.com/downloa...


message 42: by MarBear (new)

1856301 Hi Kate. Thanks for posting that link.

Marbear


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Disgrace (other topics)
The Little Stranger (other topics)
Life of Pi (other topics)
The White Tiger (other topics)
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