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message 1: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Just released - what do you think?

http://www.waterstones.com/blog/2014/...


message 2: by Angela (new)

Angela Hobbs | 213 comments Not heard of any of them!


message 3: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Costa Awards Shortlist announced - including the book Alison just posted about on "currently reading". You'll find the shortlist here
http://www.costa.co.uk/costa-book-awa...

any views?


message 4: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
David Nicholls (author of the hugely successful "One Day" wins Author of the Year at the National Book Awards for Us. A book about a family on holiday in Europe and the breakdown of relationships. Anyone read it?
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014...


message 5: by Alison (new)

Alison Golby | 75 comments Yes, I've read it Ian. It tells the story of the ending of the Peterson's marriage - and portrays a very dysfunctional family! I enjoyed reading it, but it didn't blow me away - I rated it 3 stars (but it was probably a 3.5 in reality). I didn't really relate to any of the 3 main characters (Douglas - a stuff, uptight biochemist who adores his wife but always seems to get everything wrong in her eyes, Connie - a bohemian artistic ebullient character, and Albie - a typical teenager who hates his father but adores his mother) and the idea that you would still head off on a European road trip after your wife announces she thinks she wants a divorce is a bit far fetched to me. Having said that, it is well written with both comic and sad elements to it. Definitely worth a read.


message 6: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Alison wrote: "Yes, I've read it Ian. It tells the story of the ending of the Peterson's marriage - and portrays a very dysfunctional family! I enjoyed reading it, but it didn't blow me away - I rated it 3 star..."

well, you've really sold that one! Interesting how authors find their way to winning these prizes. I quite enjoyed One Day - which I did read in a day (just after I broke me arm so had nothing much else I could do)- but thought that was, whilst enjoyable enough, not really up to the hype.


message 7: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments I've read it too. Absolutely loved it. Had my tablet on my lap looking at the pictures they were talking about. Got a 5* from me because it made me laugh and I have been to many of the places they talked about it and seemed authentic - especially the sunburn in Sienna! The very short 'chapters' made it easy to pick up when only had a short time to read.


message 8: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Just published the Booker International finalists - some really intersting authors featured and the interviews with them worth a read

http://gu.com/p/486q5/sfb


message 9: by Ruth (new)

Ruth Downie | 71 comments I'm sure some of the writers in this group must be eligible to enter for the Winston Graham prize -

"The Prize will be £3000 awarded for an outstanding published work of historical fiction based in the South West of Britain. Published’ works (including self-published) are defined as any works published in the last three years that have been distributed to the public either by sale or other transfer of ownership, rental, lease or lending including electronic publication distributed through the internet."
Deadline is 31 July, and all the info is here:

http://www.royalcornwallmuseum.org.uk...


message 10: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Ruth wrote: "I'm sure some of the writers in this group must be eligible to enter for the Winston Graham prize -

"The Prize will be £3000 awarded for an outstanding published work of historical fiction based ..."


Thanks for letting us know Ruth. Be great to think that those members whose work fits the criteria could get some more support through the prize, either through winning or by being on a shortlist or recognised in some other way.


message 11: by DrMama (new)

DrMama | 376 comments Ian wrote: "Just published the Booker International finalists - some really intersting authors featured and the interviews with them worth a read

http://gu.com/p/486q5/sfb"

Thanks for that Ian, and the other listings. The 'Satantango' is stunning, one of the best books I've ever read, and Krasznahorkai László has recently won a major international prize. I was surprised Mabanckou, Alainis there - I hadn't realised he had such a large body of work, maybe they're not translated, 'though it is imposible to keep abreast of all. Thanks again - I'm trying to make my Summer reading all books in translation, but I'm hopeless at sticking to reading schedules.


message 12: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
DrMama wrote: "Ian wrote: "Just published the Booker International finalists - some really intersting authors featured and the interviews with them worth a read

http://gu.com/p/486q5/sfb"
Thanks for that Ian, an..."


My pleasure. An interesting list. I've nor started on those authors yet bur will do so. Spending too much time on the Book Club that I'm nor reading half so much but its all good fun and its good to be making si many new friends.


message 13: by DrMama (new)

DrMama | 376 comments Just seen [via Michael Orthofer's 'Literary Saloon' website] that North Devon author Nina Lane is shortlisted for 'The Novella' award, for 'The Harlequin' see: http://thenovellaaward.com/shortlist-.... I don't know her work, but she has published several novellas, so maybe someone to watch.


message 14: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
DrMama wrote: "Just seen [via Michael Orthofer's 'Literary Saloon' website] that North Devon author Nina Lane is shortlisted for 'The Novella' award, for 'The Harlequin' see: http://thenovellaaward.com/shortlist..."

Thanks Carol - I am not familiar with Nina's work but have just sent her a message on her website to see if we can connect with her. We have such a lot of talent in Devon - it is great to see local writers doing so well. I'll also put a post on our Facebook page


message 15: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
have you seen that the Booker Longlist has just been announced?

http://time.com/3976615/man-booker-lo...

Read any of them, anyone?


message 16: by Angela (new)

Angela Hobbs | 213 comments Just the one so far: Lila by Marilynne Robinson.


message 17: by Ley (new)

Ley Holloway | 188 comments usually a Booker nomination tells me that I should run as far in the opposite direction as I can, although Spool of Blue Thread is supposed to be really good, if library reservations are anything to go by it's quite popular, although they can never remember the title properly!


message 18: by DrMama (new)

DrMama | 376 comments I used to be very interested, and followed the debates and blog. This largely followed on from Kingsbridge Library Reading Group being involved in the 2007 Booker, and being invited to the Shortlist Party. That was a good year - although 'Darkmans' should have won!! I think it began to go downhill with all the wittering about 'page turners' from the Head of Judges one year, and then making the prize accessible to US novels signalled a 'losing out' by both women and many writers from Canada, India, etc. The last year I took any interest was when Mantel's 'Bring Up the Bodies' won - it is good, and I was okay with the choice, but really (IMNSHO) Will Self's 'Umbrella' was the best ... just not an easy read.


message 19: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
I get that, but I'm a sucker for a list. it's always interesting to see the nominations. lots of authors I don't know this year, so that is a good outcome. exposes me to new writers. I read and enjoyed The Luminaries last year.


message 20: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments I always think the Booker will be a struggle - and the winners often are (for me). I have read The Green Road and A Spool of Blue Thread and enjoyed both. Hated The Gathering so was pleasantly surprised. Have ordered 3 more from the library so fingers crossed one of them will be successful. Most of the ones that appeal to me don't make the shortlist!


message 21: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Sue wrote: "I always think the Booker will be a struggle - and the winners often are (for me). I have read The Green Road and A Spool of Blue Thread and enjoyed both. Hated [bo..."

Yes, I agree but I do like to hear about new authors so will explore some of those unfamiliar names in duie course


message 22: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
This years Guardian longlist announced. Hard to keep up with all the awards and prizes so if you spot any please let us know

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015...


message 23: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments Sleeping on Jupiter by Anuradha Roy Booker longlisted. Very sad and there were some loose ends in this story of abuse. Three elderly ladies on pilgrimage to the same temple are also main characters. I'll never know whether my guesses were correct .... And I hate that!


message 24: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Not a ringing endorsement then!


message 25: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments Ian wrote: "Not a ringing endorsement then!"

No it was very skillfully written and there was lots to think about. A sense of place is very important to me and it certainly had that. It just left me with too many unanswered questions. But I HAD to finish it!


message 26: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
The MAN Booker Shortlist was announced today. Congratulations and good luck to all the authors
http://www.themanbookerprize.com/…/ma...


message 27: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments Read Satin Island and didnt like it much!


message 28: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Sue wrote: "Read Satin Island and didnt like it much!"

Hi Sue - thats a shame. The blurb is intriguing, if a little hard to pin down. What didn't you like about it?


message 29: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments No sense of place, didnt like the characters much - no development of characters except 1. Bits were interesting but no real plot. I do like a beginning, middle and end ☺. Could see why it had been shortlisted as it was innovative. (Well to me anyway)


message 30: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Sue wrote: "No sense of place, didnt like the characters much - no development of characters except 1. Bits were interesting but no real plot. I do like a beginning, middle and end ☺. Could see why it had been..."

Hmm - not a lot to recommend it then.


message 31: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Been away with work this week, hence the radio silence. I doubt that you missed it but, just in case, the MAN Booker prize winner was announced midweek. Congratulations to Marlon James, The story is told from the perspectives of 76 different characters and runs to 680 pages. The "Brief History" part of the title, he jokes, was "based on those Concise Oxford Dictionaries - which are always four inches thick". Sounds like a read for those dark winter evenings.

Anyone read it yet?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainme...


message 32: by Ian (last edited Nov 03, 2015 08:57AM) (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
What a worthy winner of the "Best of the Best" of the Bailey's Women's Prize. Half of a Yellow SunA wonderful book.

https://youtu.be/dZ60FcGeom4


message 33: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments Ian wrote: "What a worthy winner of the "Best of the Best" of the Bailey's Women's Prize. Half of a Yellow SunA wonderful book.

https://youtu.be/dZ60FcGeom4"


Yes, it was brilliant!


message 34: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Congratulations to Tanya Landman, who has been longlisted for the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize for her book Hell and High Water. A well deserved accolade for a wonderful Devon writer.

https://www.theguardian.com/childrens...


message 35: by B.A. (new)

B.A. Steadman | 34 comments Well done Tanya! Brilliant to be shortlisted for such a prestigious award.


message 36: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
What do we think about this years Booker shortlist? http://themanbookerprize.com/news/man...

I like the look of David Szalay (Canada-UK) - All That Man Is (Jonathan Cape) and Madeleine Thien (Canada) - Do Not Say We Have Nothing (Granta Books)


message 37: by Sue (last edited Oct 24, 2016 03:02PM) (new)

Sue | 319 comments There was an interesting programme on saturday - Artsnight - which went through them all. Should be on iplayer if anyone's interested. Have got His Bloody Project from the library.


message 38: by Ian (last edited Oct 25, 2016 12:58AM) (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Sue wrote: "There was an interesting programme on saturday - Artsnight - which went through them all. Should be on iplayer if anyone's interested. Have got His Bloody Project from the library."

Thanks Sue - I recorded that but haven't watched it yet. His Bloody Project looked interesting but I want more escapism than reality at present haha


message 39: by Sue (new)

Sue | 319 comments Heard Madelaine Thien on the world service in tbe middle of the night and her book did sound interesting. From what I remember , it's about the life of her characters leading up to the events in the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.


message 40: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Sue wrote: "Heard Madelaine Thien on the world service in tbe middle of the night and her book did sound interesting. From what I remember , it's about the life of her characters leading up to the events in th..."

Thats right - the blurb says

In Canada in 1991, ten-year-old Marie and her mother invite a guest into their home: a young woman called Ai-Ming, who has fled China in the aftermath of the Tiananmen Square protests.

Ai-Ming tells Marie the story of her family in Revolutionary China - from the crowded teahouses in the first days of Chairman Mao’s ascent to the Shanghai Conservatory in the 1960s and the events leading to the Beijing demonstrations of 1989. It is a story of revolutionary idealism, music, and silence, in which three musicians - the shy and brilliant composer Sparrow, the violin prodigy Zhuli, and the enigmatic pianist Kai - struggle during China’s relentless Cultural Revolution to remain loyal to one another and to the music they have devoted their lives to. Forced to re-imagine their artistic and private selves, their fates reverberate through the years, with deep and lasting consequences for Ai-Ming – and for Marie.


message 41: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Listened to a fascinating interview with Anakana Schofield earlier today, talking about her book Martin John. She writes from the voice of a sex offender, his mother and other people - a challenging subject by anyone's definition; but I was really engaged by her and, from time to time, I like to be challenged by what I read - do you? Can you think of book that unsettled you?
Martin John was shortlisted for the Goldsmith Prize in 2016 - which celebrates innovation in writing. Definitely one I want to read.
Joanna Walsh (Goldsmith's judge) on Martin John
An unwinding of damaged minds through internalised language, Martin John traces the lives of a sex offender and his mother, as they try to keep him on the straight and narrow. The book is an extraordinary engagement with the words we use to ourselves, to each other, to think about the unthinkable: to deal with the harm we do within families, via systems of punishment and care, as well as the harms we suffer ourselves. Most extraordinarily, Martin John is not only a virtuoso evocation of troubling states of mind: it's alarmingly funny too.
Anakana Schofield, Martin John
Martin John must put a stop to it. They have an agreement, he and Mam. Get out to Aunty Noanie on Wednesday. Stop talking rubbish. Don’t go near the buses and don’t go down on the Tube. Keep yourself on the outside. Get a job at night. Get a job at night or else I’ll come for ya.
But Martin John can’t stop. Meddlers are interrupting him and Martin John doesn’t like Meddlers. If he’s interrupted he can’t complete his circuits; if he can’t complete his circuits, bad things may happen. That’s a fact.
Written with all the electrifying humour of her award-winning debut Malarky, exhibiting a startling grasp of the loops and obsessions of a molester’s mind, Martin John is a testament to Anakana Schofield’s skill and audacity—and stands as a brilliant, Beckettian exploration of a man’s long slide into deviancy.
About the author
Anakana Schofield won the Amazon.ca First Novel Award and the Debut-Litzer Prize for Fiction in 2013 for her debut novel Malarky. Malarky was also nominated for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, selected as a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers pick and named on many Best Book of the Year lists for 2012 and 2013. Martin John, her critically acclaimed second novel, was shortlisted for the Giller Prize. Schofield contributes criticism and essays to the London Review of Books Blog, The Guardian, The Irish Times, The Globe and Mail and more.


message 42: by Ruth (new)

Ruth Downie | 71 comments The next round of the Winston Graham historical fiction prize is open for entries! This time they are saying that they'd prefer books with "a clear connection to Cornwall" but Devon is really very close, no?
http://www.royalcornwallmuseum.org.uk...


message 43: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Ruth wrote: "The next round of the Winston Graham historical fiction prize is open for entries! This time they are saying that they'd prefer books with "a clear connection to Cornwall" but Devon is really very ..."

Close geographically, certainly but is it the same world haha? You entering?


message 44: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
I see that the Costa Book of the year is announced on Tuesday.
Since their launch in 1971, the awards have rewarded a wide range of excellent books and authors across all genres.

Among them is Devon poet, Alice Oswald for her collection "Falling Awake"

The prize has five categories - First Novel, Novel, Biography, Poetry and Children's Book - with one of the five winning books selected as the overall Costa Book of the Year. It is the only prize which places children’s books alongside adult books in this way.
Books are entered by publishers, and entry for the Awards closes at the end of June each year. The Category Winners for 2016can be found here:

http://www.costa.co.uk/…/45…/2016-cat...

About Falling Awake:
Mutability – a sense that all matter is unstable in the face of mortality – is at the heart of this collection, and each poem is involved in that drama: the held tension that is embodied life, and
life’s losing struggle with the gravity of nature. Working as before with an ear to the oral tradition, these poems attend to the organic shapes and sounds and momentum of the language as it’s spoken as well as how it’s thought: fresh, fluid and propulsive, but also fragmentary, repetitive. These are poems that are written to be read aloud.

About the author:
Alice Oswald lives in Devon and is married with three children. Her collections include Dart, which won the 2002 T S Eliot Prize, Woods etc. (Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize), A Sleepwalk on
the Severn (Hawthornden Prize), Weeds and Wildflowers (Ted Hughes Award) and, most recently, Memorial, which won the 2013 Warwick Prize for Writing. ‘Dunt’, included in this collection, was awarded the Forward Prize for Best Single Poem.

What the judges said:
“We were all in awe of this book – please read it!”


message 45: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Just seen on Twitter that Richard Osman is teaming up with @Waterstones in Sept to run http://worldcupofbooks.co.uk . What's the best novel EVER? Tweet your nom now with #wcobooks or get a card from participating outlets - love a list http://worldcupofbooks.co.uk/


message 46: by Jane (new)

Jane Johnson | 3 comments The Desmond Elliott shortlist has just been announced:
http://www.desmondelliottprize.org.uk...
The prize was founded in memory of Desmond Elliott "to enrich the lives of new writers".


message 47: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Jane wrote: "The Desmond Elliott shortlist has just been announced:
http://www.desmondelliottprize.org.uk...
The prize was founded in memory of Desmond Elliott "to enrich the..."


hi Jane - thanks for letting us know - and what a wonderful shortlist - have you read any of them?


message 48: by Jane (new)

Jane Johnson | 3 comments Hello Ian, I have a copy of the Cocozza: 'How to be Human' I plan to read. The idea of the transformational encounter with the urban fox is intriguing: "He has looked at you and you have looked at him. As if he has something to tell you and you have something to tell him".


message 49: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
Jane wrote: "Hello Ian, I have a copy of the Cocozza: 'How to be Human' I plan to read. The idea of the transformational encounter with the urban fox is intriguing: "He has looked at you and you have looked at ..."

Great line - sounds really unusual - let us know what you think


message 50: by Ian (new)

Ian | 3159 comments Mod
The Booker Prize longlist is announced and what a fabulous range of novels - what are your thoughts?
The 2019 longlist, or ‘Booker Dozen’, of 13 novels, is:
Margaret Atwood (Canada), The Testaments (Vintage, Chatto & Windus)
Kevin Barry (Ireland), Night Boat to Tangier (Canongate Books)
Oyinkan Braithwaite (UK/Nigeria), My Sister, The Serial Killer (Atlantic Books)
Lucy Ellmann (USA/UK), Ducks, Newburyport (Galley Beggar Press)
Bernardine Evaristo (UK), Girl, Woman, Other (Hamish Hamilton)
John Lanchester (UK), The Wall (Faber & Faber)
Deborah Levy (UK), The Man Who Saw Everything (Hamish Hamilton)
Valeria Luiselli (Mexico/Italy), Lost Children Archive (4th Estate)
Chigozie Obioma (Nigeria), An Orchestra of Minorities (Little Brown)
Max Porter (UK), Lanny (Faber & Faber)
Salman Rushdie (UK/India), Quichotte (Jonathan Cape)
Elif Shafak (UK/Turkey), 10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World (Viking)
Jeanette Winterson (UK), Frankissstein (Jonathan Cape)
https://thebookerprizes.com/…/2019-bo...


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