Tournament of Books discussion
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2015 Books
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2015 ToB Competition Discussion
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Ryan
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Jan 06, 2015 05:49PM

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I read Silence Once Begun right when the long list came out. It's an original book that's framed as a non-fiction retelling through interviews and several unreliable narrators giving testimony. It's compelling and a very quick read, but I don't think it's set up to win in the TOB. It's off putting enough for someone to pick against it. It's more thought experiment/social commentary than entertaining or moving.

All the Light We Cannot See
An Untamed State
Station Eleven
Everything I Never Told You
I'm currently reading Redeployment
I have
The Bone Clocks
The Paying Guests
Guess I'd better start with those. I took a quick look at my library's website and most of the books are readily available except Dept of Speculation had 12 holds and A Brief History of Seven Killings had 5. If anyone sees any Kindle deals on these please post,

Thanks, Ed, for your numbers analysis. It always appeals to my inner geek. And I do use the page length information to help organize my choices. Happy reading!

I heard that the published version left out a few minor characters. I thought the ARC could have used a little editing, so maybe it would have been a tighter read if I had waited for the finished copy.

I heard that the published version left out a few minor characters. I thought the ARC ..."
Hmm.. probably some of the characters from the other Mitchell books. There were a LOT.

Er, Okay? I think people can be "shocked" that a book wasn't included, AND have read the intro.
Hell, if you scroll down a little, you'd see that they included Doerr's book because it was "the [...]story of the year" and that list would seem off without it. Surely, if the only job was to poke at awards and as a distraction, they could have left that (and any other book) off the list. Why bend their rules, if the goal is ONLY to be a distraction? Clearly, the "competition" is more than that.
People are expressing surprise because they may have loved a particular book and wanted to see it discussed here and by the judges. Happens every year (still don't get why 10th of December wasn't around last year!)

I've read *cough*two*cough*, All the Light We Cannot See (which I didn't love, actually) and Bone Clocks, and have 2 in my library pile (All the Birds, Singing, and The Paying Guests; the other 6 in my pile were from the longlist so boo on me). Another 5 were already on my TBR list. There are three I didn't really want to read, but now I will. I read them all last year, and the total page count this year is way lower, so I shouldn't have any problem! And, of course, as always, there are at least 4 that I'd never heard of before the longlist was published and know absolutely nothing about.
How sad is it that this is one of the greatest days of my year, the day the shortlist for the ToB is published?
Edited to add: I think the list may actually be just that little bit more mainstream than usual; all 16 of the books are available at one or the other of my local library systems. I shouldn't have to get any through ILL.

4.29 - Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay
4.23 - All the Light We Cannot See
4.17 - An Untamed State
4.09 - Redeployment..."
Thanks for ranking the books by rating Ed. I know I won't get through them all so this helps a great deal.

This is my favorite time of year for books. I read more books in this four month span than any other time of the year. And I have no regrets that four of the best books I've read in the past 11 years were longlisted but didn't make the TOB. (Tenth of December still haunts me.)


of the remaining titles, i do own 11 of them. there's something i can't quite put my finger on with this year's list -- while i love the ToB every year, i am not feeling terribly excited over this list. i am excited over the list of judges and i know i will be totally keen for the match-ups and discussions... so i just need to shake off this whatever it is.
i liked the introduction/explanations offered for the shortlisted books. it's a list. people will love it, hate it, be somewhere in the middle. one of the things i enjoy each year is just how unpredictable the whole thing is. so i feel this year is not really an exception.
hey - did anyone really LOVE 'the bone clocks'? it's the one book on the list i am having the most trouble getting psyched up for - and it's been sitting here, sadly tolerating my lack of interest, ever since its release.
the there thing i am having trouble with is ferrante's book. i am totally, totally keen to read it, but i want to read it in order, and understand this is the best approach, since it (the trilogy as published in NA) was conceived as one book. so i am worried it won't do well being the 3rd book.

I'm reading The Bone Clocks right now and I am really enjoying it! I have not read The Cloud Atlas or his other work so I have no basis for comparison in that regard but I read half the book over the weekend despite three needy kids whining at me. I find it easy to get sucked right in to! I started it in print and I had too many library books I was juggling. I read about 50 pages and had to return it for the next on the wait list. I was eager to get back to to it so I got a digital copy quickly to return to it. Hopefully the last 20-30% of the book doesn't disappoint me!

this is where i am at with it too! :)
i have read Cloud Atlas and thought it was fine. but i wasn't in the camp loving and raving about it. man, i sound like such a hardass on books. i swear i'm not. haha!!
i think that, in 2014, i had such a string of disappointing or only okay reads that my reading mood has been a bit low. i am reading Doctor Zhivago right now, so i am really hoping to bust out of the meh-ness.

I don't think Mitchell is capable of ever writing a bad book, but he set the bar pretty high with Cloud Atlas. I would have rather seen Thousand Autumns in the ToB that year. As John Warner says on his Biblioracle page, Bone Clocks does start to get a little like Dungeons and Dragons. Really, I think the book is full of novellas because Mitchell had so many ideas, and some of those novellas should have been expanded on. But I'm talking too much about this pre-ToB!

I think you should read Station Eleven next. It's one of those books that one you start it you don't want to put it down.

Thank you for your encouragement. I may read it. Life is grim and for years war books have been sliding down to the bottom of my list. First I gave up books about people dying of cancer and now war, particularly this war. Perhaps the TOB judges' opinions will influence my decision.

I totally sympathize, Joy. I think we all have vulnerable times when we need to filter our novel reading, news consumption, etc, to have any hope of maintaining our equanimity.


a while ago, and in one of my other groups, we talked about this idea, and the heavy themes in literature. then we tried coming up with some more upbeat fiction titles (that were still literary). it was an interesting exercise.


Finished Station Eleven. Enjoyed it, didn't blow my mind. Not what I expected in all the best ways. I'm not much of a dystopian future fan, but this twists what I perceive to be the cliches of the genre in nice ways. Doesn't feel like it's got the unique voice that most TOB winners have though.


What's everyone reading this weekend? I'm working on A Brave Man Seven Storeys Tall and listening to Wolf Hall (finally getting to it).

What's everyone reading this weekend? I'm working on A Brave Man Seven Storeys Tall and listeni..."
I'm finishing All the Birds, Singing then will start A Brief History of Seven Killings.
Sherri, I loved Wolf Hall but still haven't gotten around to Bring Up the Bodies. I hope to read it before seeing the BBC production (which is months or possibly years away for me, so I will probably manage).



What's everyone reading this weekend? I'm working on A Brave Man Seven Storeys Tall and listeni..."
I'm about 150 pgs into A Brief History of Seven Killings. It is so not my usual kind of book (whatever that is) so it's a bit slow.
I also just read Elena Finkle's Magic Barrel from the long list. I'm afraid I don't get the attraction of graphic novels. While I enjoyed the story I just kept thinking I'd rather be reading a book.


Interesting observations Ellen. I've only read The Little Stranger prior to The paying Guests, so I guess her regular themes are new to me, and I'm finding it an excellent read so far (more than halfway). Funnily, I didn't enjoy The Little Stranger as much as this one. I guess that means I should read her earlier books!

I'm *really* looking forward to the discussion on Adam. Its treatment of sexuality and gender is like no other book I've seen in the Tournament.


Finished:
- An Untamed State (brutal and I spent so much time flinching so I guess it was very affecting)
- Everything I Never Told You (good but not enthusiastic reaction)
- Dept. of Speculation (thought it was very well written but months later very little of it has stuck with me)
- All the Light We Cannot See (Doerr is so talented that I will definitely read more by him but I feel strangely unenthusiastic about this one)
On hold at the library and waiting for me to go out in the cold and get them: Silence Once Begun, the first in Ferrante's trilogy (I just can't read the last one first! I can't!), Annihilation, Wittgenstein Jr, All the Birds Singing
Waiting list: Adam, Redeployment
Loved Station Eleven and I'm not a huge fan of post-apocalyptic stories or her earlier novel Last Night in Montreal. It would have taken me months if not years to get to this one if it hadn't been so highly recommended by fellow Rooster enthusiasts.
Filed under disappointing when compared to the author's earlier works that I enjoyed so my reaction is probably very unfair: The Paying Guests, The Bone Clocks. It's not fair that I want to keep reading Affinity, Fingersmith, Cloud Atlas, and Black Swan Green, right?



Finished:
- An Untamed State (brutal and I spent so much time flinching so I guess it was very af..."
I'm with you, Christina. I will probably read the first Ferrante book rather than jump in at the end of the trilogy. In my most wildly optimistic moments, I picture myself reading all three of them before the tournament but given that I've only read five of the 16, I suspect that's completely unrealistic.


Sarah, I'll be looking for your reaction to Wittgenstein Jr. I had no idea after I finished it as to what I had just read, so maybe you can help make some sense of it fir me.

If it weren't in the tournament, it would already be in the return to the library pile.

I started Wittgenstein Jr. 10% in and no idea what is going on. Just another TOB adventure, I guess. I also started Adam, 65 pages in. I have been pretty absorbed by the tob books this week.


I started Wittgenstein Jr. 10% in and no idea what is going on. Just anothe..."
Jess, I just finished Untamed State today also. I need one of her valium to get my heart to stop racing. Will start "A Brief History" later today. It sounds like a slow read according to what others are saying...
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