Tournament of Books discussion
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2016 Books
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2016 - Possible Contenders
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Deborah
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Sep 09, 2015 04:15PM

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Jennifer wrote: "Ellen wrote: "The funny thing is that I do! I don't always like her books, but I thought Run was terrific.
well that's cool! Run is one of the two from her i have not yet read. it'..."
Jennifer wrote: "Ellen wrote: "The funny thing is that I do! I don't always like her books, but I thought Run was terrific.
well that's cool! Run is one of the two from her i have not yet read. it'..."

I'm listening to the audiobook now but not very far along yet.

Currently reading it myself, we shall see.

This week's surprise is The Invaders by Karolina Waclawiak, which I hadn't heard about before picking it up in the library.
I'm also very much looking forward to Fortune Smiles by Adam Johnson, author of The Orphan Master's Son.


Looks like it may have been either ill-conceived roll out of the premium service or a bait-and-switch as most of the new fiction is no longer available. Delicious Foods and Fates and Furies both have been pulled. I'm still finding great stuff to listen to, but my biggest reason for paying for premium may be gone: new fiction novels.
Jason wrote: "Looks like it may have been either ill-conceived roll out of the premium service or a bait-and-switch as most of the new fiction is no longer available...."
It seemed fishy to me that they had Fates and Furies weeks before it was published. I don't know why the publisher would have authorized a pre-release for one company.
It seemed fishy to me that they had Fates and Furies weeks before it was published. I don't know why the publisher would have authorized a pre-release for one company.


I'm reading Did You Ever Have a Family right now and loving it; Clegg does a wonderful job of giving each character a distinctive and believable voice.




and hmm, come to think of it, I love The Line of Beauty.
There is such an embarrassment of riches when it comes to literary fiction just now. I love how many books there are being written with serious intent and I love how we are allowed to disagree, that there is no Ministry of Culture telling us what's good.
And personally I'm very happy to see Satin Island on the short list.

The thing about A Little Life is that while I found the premise frankly unbelievable, on a couple of different fronts, the book itself grabbed me on a kind of visceral level and I found it heartbreaking in the way I found, say, The Time Traveller's Wife heartbreaking. And I think her writing is extraordinary.
Haven't gotten to Satin Island yet but it's firmly on my list.
Has anyone else read Carola Dibbell's The Only Ones? I'm in the middle of it now.

I'll look forward to your take. I started it when it just came out and had to set it aside because I had just read Find Me and On Such a Full Sea and Annihilation and The Country of Ice Cream Star and California and Station Eleven and I needed a break from all that post-apocalypse.
Of the above I realize now that 2 of 16 of this year's TOB were post-apocalyptic, something that I hadn't thought about before.


I was surprised and sad that Faber's book seemed not to get the attention it deserved in general, not just from the ToB crowd. It seems like there was a fair amount of buzz when it first came out, and then it just kind of got lost in the shuffle. Maybe The Bone Clocks sucked up all the oxygen? I far preferred the Faber.


I ordered The Year of the Runaways from the Book Depository just because I can't stand being told I have to wait.

AND for some reason, I haven't won any GoodReads Giveaways for months, maybe even a year. I sign up for around 10 every month and had won quite a number of them until about a year ago. One was lost in the mail for over a year until I realized to ask about it. Maybe that is why I'm stuck on Giveaways wins? I'm not sure how it works.
The Country of Ice Cream Star is available on Amazon for $1.99 if anyone is interested. I feel like I need to wait for an audiobook of that one though.

If you review on Goodreads, you could sign up for NetGalley. They let you read pre-released books in exchange for a review, similar to the giveaways on here but digital only AND you have a better chance of getting them approved (it's not a contest).

i read The Country of Ice Cream Star ahead of the women's prize for fiction shortlist announcement, earlier this year. i think it would be really interesting for the ToB.
with the right narrator, this book could be amazing on audio. newman is quite inventive with language and dialect. while the overall story didn't end up being an awesome read for me, i respect the heck out of what newman's done with this novel.

AmberBug - thanks for the info! I'd definitely be doing that if I had an e-book.
Jennifer - Thanks for the input on Country of Ice Cream Star. I know I'd have trouble reading it. I gave up on Ridley Walker because of the invented language but Ice Cream definitely sounds like an impressive book.


I've definitely been lucky, just not lately. :D

I had a winning streak about a year ago too on giveaways, but also haven't won in over a year. Do you have a Kindle? Most everything I read comes from Overdrive through my library. They don't have everything, but I can usually get on a wait list for the new releases and get them fairly quickly.

On The Book of Strange New Things: I really, really loved this book. Very underrated. I think it definitely should have been in the TOB. I read a lot of sci-fi and that is one of my favorites.
I haven't found fiction that I love yet this year. But I haven't read A Little Life yet. Waiting for the library to get the audio version since the audio of The People in the Trees was my favorite audio book ever.
Oh, wait, I did fall in love with a sci-fi book this year. Aurora. I know it won't make it to the TOB but it was quite a book. So much there at so many levels. One of my favorites now too.

I'm very interested in how the audiobook version of A Little Life is. Keep us updated when you do finally get to it.
I also loved The Book of Strange New Things and was disappointed by how little it was talked about. It had a great blend of sci-fi and was very accessible for the genre (even though I love me some sci-fi).


Jennifer wrote: "hey, was Fifteen Dogs released in the US?..."
Yes, it was released in the US in April, one month after the Canadian publication.
Yes, it was released in the US in April, one month after the Canadian publication.

:)

* Jesse Ball, A Cure for Suicide (Pantheon Books)
* Karen E. Bender, Refund: Stories (Soft Skull/Counterpoint Press)
* Bill Clegg, Did You Ever Have a Family (Scout Press/Simon & Schuster)
* Angela Flournoy, The Turner House (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
* Lauren Groff, Fates and Furies (Riverhead Books/Penguin Random House)
* Adam Johnson, Fortune Smiles (Random House)
* T. Geronimo Johnson, Welcome to Braggsville (William Morrow/HarperCollins)
* Edith Pearlman, Honeydew: Stories (Little, Brown/Hachette Book Group)
* Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life (Doubleday/Penguin Random House)
* Nell Zink, Mislaid (Ecco/HarperCollins)


Taking this oppty. to remind people to vote for their favorites on the Goodreads Picks for TOB 2016 list (cough) (Fifteen Dogs):
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/9...
Also I'm excited to see Jesse Ball on the NBA draft pick list although I haven't read his latest--I was wondering if he would ever break out of the quirky midlist and this will help. Nell Zink on the same list does not impress though, what a stinker of a book.
Not that I'm opinionated.

No FSG publication on the NBA list. No Knopf. That's interesting to me in that I think of these publishers as the traditional "lit fic" giants.
They have passed over the big names, if there is such a thing these days. No Purity. No Sleeping Giant.
Mostly also these are short books (with the obvious exception of A Little Life) or short story collections. I have noticed the tendency toward very short, charged novels lately.

i am not quite halfway through it and my emotions are really up and down with the story. the writing is terrific. one of the issues (not sure if that's what to call it?) has to do with writers reimagining 'the gods' (&/or ancient mythology) - of course alexis adds a twist to it with the dogs. i feel like this is done a lot (Gods Behaving Badly, The Infinities, American Gods, The Penelopiad, The Song of Achilles off the top of my head) so i am not quite on board with the premise at this point. though i totally love the observations/presentations alexis is making about human nature and society.
Poingu wrote: "Taking this oppty. to remind people to vote for their favorites on the Goodreads..."
I added three of my favorite 2015 books to the list, The Tusk That Did the Damage, The Animals, and Us Conductors (Thanks for the recommendation, Jennifer).
I added three of my favorite 2015 books to the list, The Tusk That Did the Damage, The Animals, and Us Conductors (Thanks for the recommendation, Jennifer).


oh, cool!! i am so glad you enjoyed Us Conductors, tina!! :)

I am excited to read Fortune Smiles, the others less so. I did already read A Little Life, and, as previously mentioned on this thread, am not a fan. I think right now it is more of a personal problem of being burnt out on the American family novel, which seems to be the dominating theme of this year's choices.
I'm most excited about reading Undermajordomo Minor Has anyone had a chance to read this yet? I adored the Sisters Brothers, so I have high hopes.
I am hoping some of these fall releases reignites a reading frenzy, as I've been in a bit of a rut lately.

I am excited to read Fortune Smiles, the others less so. I did already read A Little Life, and, as previously mentioned on this thread, am not a fan. I think right now it..."
I would not describe Welcome to Braggsville as an "American family novel," and I thought it was very good, so you might want to try it. Also, Did You Ever Have a Family is not your typical American family novel, either; I loved it and hope you give it a try, too.

so glad you mentioned Undermajordomo Minor, tiffany. i also loved The Sisters Brothers. i have a copy of the new book here, but haven't not started to read it yet.
it did get me wondering about whether past authors are automatically considered, or if it's more 'hmmm... we've already featured this writer, let's pick someone else.'. (same question came to mind with The Story of the Lost Child from Elena Ferrante.)

I am excited to read Fortune Smiles, the others less so. I did already read A Little Life, and, as previously mentioned on this thread, am not a fan. I th..."
Thanks for the recommendations, Deborah. I was thinking of Welcome to Braggsville, but was on the fence. I think I will put it on hold at the library. I do have Did You Ever Have A Family on hold at my library. I think I'll see how I feel when it come up.

Waiting for me to pick up today at the two libraries I frequent: Fates and Furies, Fishbowl: A Novel (two copies), Sweet Caress, Undermajordomo Minor (two copies), and This Is Your Life, Harriet Chance!. Why do they all have to come in at the same time!?!

I finished Purity on audio and here is my review
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Nice review, Janet -- thanks for posting the link here. Purity is pretty far down on my list, partly because of his persona, which you nailed; partly because there's so much other stuff I'm more excited to read (Fates & Furies, Under Majordomo, for starters); and partly because I found huge swaths of Freedom (Patty's journal, what's his name's relationship with the much younger woman, the birdwatching) really irritating.
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