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Booker Prize for Fiction
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2021 Booker Prize Shortlist Discussion
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Karen Michele
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Nov 02, 2021 01:34PM

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I would be happy to see any of them win. I don’t have a favorite at this point. I enjoyed The Fortune Men, but now realize it hasn’t had staying power with me. None of them did. If given a pop quiz I don’t know that I could name every book on the shortlist, much less the longlist at this point (and I don’t think that’s because I turned 60 on the 31st and am getting forgetful.)

The one thought I would impress on everyone is that time goes faster the older one gets so do the thing you want to do now, appreciate every moment with loved ones, and definitely do not postpone joy.

Thanks, Emily.

I think we can take the Promise in that Passage as Great news. It's Fortune-ate that we won't be Talking About a split winner after the Bewilderment of 2019.

I think we can take the Promise in that Passage as Great new..."
Love the spirit.



I think we can take the Promise in that Passage as Great new..."
Well done GY!
Can I ask where the confidence that The Promise is the frontrunner is actually coming from? Is it because Galgut has been shortlisted before? Powers has too. Or is it just the sense that The Promise is the most Booker-esque of the shortlisted titles?

I’m not even sure what Bookeresque was or is for me now.

I think we can take the Promise in that Passage as Great new..."
Very clever, GY.

I'm confused. The two books that are bottom of our collective dynamic rankings are by American authors. Of the four books that are serious contenders for the prize, 3 are non-US authors unless I have nationalities wrong.


Ha! I am using my own ratings of course.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/events/epb5q9/l..."
Will it change to live video coverage at 7.15pm GMT?

It is 2:55pm here which makes it 7:55pm there. Are they delayed? I’m on BBC and it says Starting soon at 7:15?




Paul normally and I think sensibly bets against things he wants to happen so as to have an emotional hedge if they do.

Paul normally and I think sensibly bets against things he wants to happen so as to have an emotional hedge if they do."
Does that mean that Paul put his money on Great Circle? See Bookstagram humour post on Great Circle winning, which the Booker Prize shared:
https://www.instagram.com/p/CV0cK55Lg81/

No re Paul - the odds are very poor this year (big margin for the Bookies). The real book that has attractive odds is Passage North which is (a) one of his favourites on the full longlist and (b) an outsider for a reason in his view.

Paul normally and I think sensibly bets against things he wants to happen so as to have an emotional hedge if they do."
Because of the odds. : )
I have closed the rankings thread and marked all the books as read on the group bookshelf. Not feeling strongly invested in the decision this time, as there is no clear standout.


I'd be reasonably happy if Great Circle won - I quite enjoyed it.
The emotional hedge would be Lockwood - so Sam and I are aligned in that

Good book but I can't say I'm particularly comfortable with the author winning I'm afraid



I was hoping when he talked about books coming out of Africa he would say, pointedly, by black authors that should be read.
Paul, you can’t be cryptic then clam up. It’s impolite. Those who don’t want to revisit 2019 can skim past.
I’m not disappointed nor overly excited.


I was never really in sync with their views (at longlist or shortlist stage so I was not expecting to agree their winner).
To be fair to him - it clearly meant a great deal and to be shortlisted but not win three times would have been difficult.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Conservationist (other topics)Il conservatore (other topics)
Light Perpetual (other topics)
The Promise (other topics)
The Promise (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Anuk Arudpragasam (other topics)Damon Galgut (other topics)
Patricia Lockwood (other topics)
Nadifa Mohamed (other topics)
Richard Powers (other topics)
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