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2019 Booker Longlist - links and connections
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message 51:
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Neil
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Aug 19, 2019 03:02PM

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...the fact that Oprah would say build a wall, a symbolic, see-through, self-protective wall, "a great big beautiful wall", but walls don't work, except the Great Wall of China maybe..."

In Ducks, the narrator says that octopi is the wrong term and the correct one is octopuses
As my spell check has not shown the telltale red underline, I guess BOTH terms are correct


I wonder what Rushdie has to say about this

"the fact that he said there were three things involved, if you wanted to be happy in life, and they were, 1, get an inheritance, and 2, go to Tangiers, and 3, well I forget the third one..."
On a night boat, presumably.

As my spell check has not shown the telltale red underline, I guess BOTH terms are correct "
Oh wow - do we get to believe spell check now? I shall immediately be informing the neurology community b/c that damned red line is the bane of our existence. (And sometimes it thinks a spelling is correct when that is simply not true also.) I'm on the hunt for the octopus plural as soon as I get out of "work" (also known as reading GR.)

OED gives Plural octopuses, octopi, (rare) octopodes Brit.
(octopodes and octopi both get the red squiggle.)

As my spell check has not shown the telltale red underline, I guess BOTH terms are correct "
Oh wo..."
True! the fact that (ARGH that is now a permanent part of my vocabulary) that both the words longlist and dystopic get the red squiggle is strange
Octopodes are definitely still in fashion among crossword solvers - setters who use octopi to escape awkward parts of the grid invariably attract criticism!
This one is very tenuous! Ylang-ylang is mentioned early in the Man who saw Everything. Zaftig is used to describe Happy Smile early in Quichotte. Both have been used as solutions in this year's Guardian cryptic crosswords!

Well clearly that was planned by the whole bunch together. It's obviously some plot we're only aware of b/c you do the crosswords!

The Man Who Saw Everything begins with (and is based around) a car which then ends up turning into a cat, striking a man

"...the fact that I wonder if kids of the future will look at their parents any more forgivingly than mine do, or will they blame us all, the fact that our grandchildren probably won’t even be able to bring themselves to say hello to us seniors, the fact that they’d be right to bear a grudge about it,..." -Ellmann, Lucy. Ducks, Newburyport
Intergenerational blame is a key theme in The Wall by John Lancaster. I wish he would have explored it more thoroughly.

Ada in The a Testaments is named after Atwood’s Aunt (possibly Great Aunt) who shot a raccoon in her own garden (along with copious squirrels).

WndyJW wrote: "Ducks, Quichotte, Night Boat, 10 Minutes, The Testaments, and My Sister, Lost Children, GWO, The Man Who Saw, and Lanny all have children who gave their parents anxiety. That’s not much of a stretc..."
Yes, you could apply this one to Orchestra of Minorities too.
Yes, you could apply this one to Orchestra of Minorities too.

Mastodons can't be a very common subject in literary fiction, but that's 33% of the shortlisted books that mention them.
Edit: "Fun" story about about mastodons. One time I was working in a conference room with 4 or 5 co-workers and had to take a phone call. On the call I was reading out a password or something, like "T as in Tom, B as in Book..." I get to M and go "M as in.... (long pause)... mastodon." Started cracking up and the whole conference room was laughing at me - good times.
