Tournament of Books discussion
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2015 Books
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2015 ToB Competition Discussion
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Juniper
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Mar 30, 2015 03:26PM

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http://www.themorningnews.org/tob/201...
I have not yet read An Untamed State nor All the Light We Cannot See, but it did feel callously dismissive of Judge Merritt to boil down An Untamed State to "don't pay the ransom." It almost seems like he missed the entire point of the novel.
I will be rooting heartily for Station Eleven tomorrow in the final!

Brian wrote: "Today's judgment may be regarded as mean, but it was no where near as eviscerating as Natasha Vargas-Cooper with regards to The Fault in Our Stars vs. Building Stories a couple years ago.
http://w..."
I revisited that judgment when it was referenced on Friday. Like today, Kevin and John were pretty tough on Vargas-Cooper over her (unfairly?) harsh criticism of both books. They were annoyed by her treatment of TFioS, but they were ANGRY about her dismissal of Building Stories. She was definitely the curmudgeon judge (Peck award winner) last year!
http://w..."
I revisited that judgment when it was referenced on Friday. Like today, Kevin and John were pretty tough on Vargas-Cooper over her (unfairly?) harsh criticism of both books. They were annoyed by her treatment of TFioS, but they were ANGRY about her dismissal of Building Stories. She was definitely the curmudgeon judge (Peck award winner) last year!


i am totally looking forward to the watch list too, jen! :)

I loved Delicious Foods and will be looking for it in the final 4 next year.



Thanks again everyone for a great few months of speculation (who will make the long/short list?), reading, and discussion. Forget about Christmas, this is truly the most wonderful time of the year!
Looking forward to jumping on new 2015 reads and guessing next year's competitors. Tho still feel I have some some unfinished business with this year's list as do want/fully intend to get to the Ferrante series and finish up the Area X trilogy.
See you all in the 2016 Possible Contenders (already on its 4th page -- remember when we didn't start that thread until ToB was over).
Here's to books -- and readers, cheers!

I'm not sure that's a positive or a negative, really.

I've always thought that the two zombies, at the least, should be pitted against themselves. I'm not sure which book the winner would face then, but it seems somehow more "fair"

Thanks again everyone for a great few months of speculation (who will make the long/short list?), reading, and discuss..."
Yes, it's a sad day when the TOB is over. I'm reading Authority now then will move on to Brown Girl Dreaming then on to next year's contenders.

ah - yes! i had that thought as well. so then only one zombie could ever be in a final.
Topher wrote: "As i said in the comments: TOB 2015--The year we believed in hope (all signs to the contrary).
I didn't realize that was you, Topher. Great summation of ToB 2015.
I didn't realize that was you, Topher. Great summation of ToB 2015.

I share your tears over an all book-club-approved final. After a decade or so, I think this will look like one of the weakest Finals for the ToB. Still, I am happy to have read the Ferrante trilogy, Annihilation, and A Brief History of Seven Killings and I wouldn't have read them but for the ToB, so it is still a win.
And there's always next year when we can hope that the one truly brilliant gem from the year will, actually, thrillingly take the title. Of course, we'll all disagree on which book is The One.

Regarding seething: Yes. Especially, when you read it for a book club and, as you or Poingu said, you show up ready to trash this colossal waste of a good tree and everyone starts praising it. The polite thing to do, I suppose, is sit quietly. Very quietly. So I did, this time. But, sheesh, it is hard not to ask to your left and right, "Can I check to see if your book looks the same as mine does, on the inside?"
The last one I read, which I will not name for fear someone buys and reads it out of morbid curiosity, was a non-fiction book that read like unedited research notes, at best. And the research consisted primarily of interviews with scattered references to other non-fiction. So, you'd be reading an unedited transcript of an interview, or so it felt, then, with nary a transition, a half-assed book summary, then back to transcript. I should have done more muttering to my wife....it maybe would have spared you. As you can see, I cannot let it go. It sticks. Yeah. It does.

I'd be interested in what exactly the criticism of it being a "book club" book even means? Again, I'm not trying to criticize anyone here, just defending a book that really meant a lot to me.

Brian, I called the two finalists "the book-clubbiest" of the TOB contenders. By that I meant that they are very enjoyable, stylistically traditional, rewarding enough, but not very challenging reads--which is exactly the kind of book that everyone picks for their book club, which is exactly why these both fell into the category of "literary bestseller."
I would have preferred one of the more challenging, risky, quirky, pick-your-vector TOB novels to have won, rather than Station Eleven. I enjoyed Station Eleven a lot but there was nothing that knocked my socks off about it and so giving it the prize felt like regressing toward the mean.

I will say that I think the current format usually prefers a popular book to a risky one. This is due to the zombie round and the fact that as near as I can tell the ToB tends to select judges who are not necessarily entrenched in fiction to judge the zombie round (i.e. Judge Merritt).

Thanks Brian. I totally hear what you're saying. You're right about the scenes you mention and their staying power. Frankly I enjoyed reading Station Eleven a great deal more than the book I thought should have won, Brief History of Seven Killings. I'm not sure why I'd pick James or Ball or Gay or one of the other novels. But maybe this is one of my criteria: a novel that wins a prize should be something no one else in this world could have written. I feel that way about James's book and I don't feel that way about Mandel's book.
This is kind of like the Avatar vs. Hurt Locker argument I guess.

For me, every book I read in the ToB felt like only its author could've presented it - whether it be Ng's heartbreaking exploration of the dynamics of family in Everything I Never Told You or Offill's take on the challenges of marriage, I really felt each voice was distinctive. But I can understand what you're saying - James's book does sound from everything I've heard to be an achievement and one that will be lauded for many years to come. In the end, I feel that way about Station Eleven as well, but as you can tell I'm pretty biased on the matter!

Sorry! Bad example. I just meant by Hurt Locker vs. Avatar that people giving awards frequently snoot upon the more commercially successful option. And I'm pretty baffled by my own criteria for worthiness and I'm really aware through posting here over the last few weeks that I contradict myself all the time. I'm learning a lot though.
Brian wrote: "I guess I'm not quite understanding all of the dislike of Station Eleven?"
Station Eleven is agreat very good novel and a worthy ToB champion. It was the book I most enjoyed reading. But, I also liked All the Light, and I would have been satisfied with either of them as the winner. Still, A Brief History was my favorite book, in part because it was challenging for me. Also, it had such a strong voice, and it was risky--not something I would read in my book clubs.
Station Eleven is a

I guess the obvious answer is to do one of two things: don't select any widely read / 'popular' titles for the tournament, or change the zombie round (maybe, as suggested elsewhere, pitting zombies against each other earlier so that only one advances).

I don't want them to stop selecting "popular" titles, though. Part of the fun is seeing the widely read books of the year pitted against books that aren't well known.

And let's face it, the Rooster historically has not gone to unknowns for the most part. In the eleven contests held so far, four winners have gotten the Pulitzer, one the Booker, and one the National Book Award. Of the five remaining, one is by Toni Morrison and one is Cloud Atlas. The other three are The Accidental, The Sisters Brothers, and Station Eleven. It would seem clear that even if the Rooster is supposed to be somewhat of a parody of book awards, it still manages to go to the highly praised books nevertheless.
I would agree that perhaps the Zombie round could be muted somewhat, as the most popular books are sometimes not the best (though Orphan Master's Son was a zombie and I think you'd get little argument that it was the best that year). Perhaps have the two Zombies go against each other and the two semifinalists go against each other for a Zombie-semifinalist final?






Just for my two cents, I agree with Poingu that the criteria for a book club book involves accessibility. You are right that there are some interesting ideas in Station Eleven, but, for me, they were more alluded to than explored. I feel the same about All the Light. In fact, I thought the two followed a very similar framework.
1. Very good writing, but not stylistically inventive (i.e. Much to like, but nothing that might turn people off)
2. Likeable protagonists, though All the Light was the safest in this regard by including a golden-hearted, bookish, blind girl. I am not sure it is possible to get more likeable than that.
3. A cartoonish villain to drive plot and provide suspense.
4. Some moral questions, but mostly it was telegraphed where the 'good' was. Readers can feel good about themselves for being on the right side.
5. Interesting ideas (rebuilding/preserving society, communication/human connection in the face of evil), but more available to the reader than explored. I doubt many readers will disagree regarding preserving culture or recognizing fascism is bad but good people are caught up in war machinery on both sides, it sucks to be disconnected and aren't we so much more connected now but kind of not too?
6. References and parallels to classic literature to give people something to discuss. (Same thing really: main, root-for-them characters who love books, I.e. Characters just like the readers).
7. Not a book club thing, but the best part of both novels were objects: the wood-carved miniature city and the graphic novel.
There isn't much to hate (other than the villains) and there is much to like. As someone said, they are books you can recommend to anyone which is another way of saying they won't challenge anyone's moral / philosophical / aesthetic / etc. sensibilities much, if at all.

And as far as A Brief History goes, by the end I was really dreading picking it up. I REALLY dislike dialect in pretty much any form, so that's part of it. But I also think that at some point "challenging" becomes "inaccessible" and I think that's a bug, not a feature.

you know, i actually had fairly low expectations going into it - so many people i know found it really... lacking, and confused by the awards it was nominated for or won. so i was happily surprised with it. i just read it at the end of january (this year) and i am sure it will be on my favourite reads list at year's end.

Station Eleven is a great very good novel and a worthy ToB champion. It was the book I most enjoyed reading..."
Tina, you articulated my feelings better than I could. And I do feel ABHoSK was an important book even though that's not a criteria for the TOB. I probably wouldn't have read it if it hadn't been included and I'm very glad I did (although I didn't always feel that way while I was reading it).

I really didn't mean those points (other than cartoon villain) as necessarily knocks. Both books were enjoyable and lots of people like them, so their authors have made something pretty and, so, improved the world. And, as you say, I am sure plenty of people really connected with both of them. One of my favorite novels, My Antonia, probably fits fairly well into those categories too. (Of course, I think it is a cut above, but it connected meaningfully with me.). Like everyone, if the book connects, I can love a book even it isn't big-C challenging, but if it doesn't connect, it is just okay. The same is probably true for challenging books. We connect and get lost in a great experience. We don't and maybe focus on flaws.
I was mainly just trying to describe common features of at least one sort of book-club book, and where these two overlap.

I really didn't mean those points (other than cartoon villain) as necessarily knocks. Both books were enjoyable and lots of people like them, so their authors have made something pretty and, so, improved the world. And, as you say, I am sure plenty of people really connected with both of them. One of my favorite novels, My Antonia, probably fits fairly well into those categories too. (Of course, I think it is a cut above, but it connected meaningfully with me.). Like everyone, if the book connects, I can love a book even it isn't big-C challenging, but if it doesn't connect, it is just okay. The same is probably true for challenging books. We connect and get lost in a great experience. We don't and maybe focus on flaws.
I was mainly just trying to describe common features of at least one sort of book-club book, and where these two overlap.

I really didn't mean those points (other than cartoon villain) as necessarily knocks. Both books were enjoyable and lots of people like them, so their authors have made something pretty and, so, improved the world. And, as you say, I am sure plenty of people really connected with both of them. One of my favorite novels, My Antonia, probably fits fairly well into those categories too. (Of course, I think it is a cut above, but it connected meaningfully with me.). Like everyone, if the book connects, I can love a book even it isn't big-C challenging, but if it doesn't connect, it is just okay. The same is probably true for challenging books. We connect and get lost in a great experience. We don't and maybe focus on flaws.
I was mainly just trying to describe common features of at least one sort of book-club book, and where these two overlap.

Yes, HBB didn't wow me as much as I expected. I may have rushed it or maybe my expectations were too high. This is one I might revisit to see if my feelings changed. I just couldn't believe I didn't love it!
Drew wrote: "...you articulated my feelings better than I could."
Thanks! Your reply makes me laugh because I have used those exact words so often to describe other people's posts.
Thanks! Your reply makes me laugh because I have used those exact words so often to describe other people's posts.




I don't want them to stop selecting "popular" titles, though. Part of the fun is seeing the widely read books of the year pitted against b..."
I totally agree with this. what's the point of having judgments if they are going to be negated by a popularity contest?
We got 2 book-club favorites in the finals because they were accessible to the most people pre-tourney, got the most zombie votes and despite being beaten in the early rounds, were 'resurrected'. bleh.
My vote would be 1 zombie, or have the zombies face off in one semi and the winners bracket face off in the other, so it doesn't shake out to be z vs z in the final ever.
I am on record elsewhere in my dislike of Station Eleven for all the reasons.
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