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2021 Goldsmiths Prize General Discussion
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Sam
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Oct 07, 2021 06:37AM

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Shortlist readings 20 October
Winner announcement 10 November
Shortlist readings are on line which seems a massive shame to me - not sure why the Womens Prize and Booker can manage in person

There was such a buzz at the Womens prize event though and the authors all remarked in how much it meant to meet readers and read their books to a live audience.

I loved Ducks, Newburyport and I liked most of Things Are Against Us, so I’m going to tell myself Ms Ellmann was being a provocateur and doesn’t really believe that all things bad come from science. How could any intelligent person entertain that thought?!


I loved Ducks, Newbury..."
There's nothing wrong in having a unpopular opinion but it's how one says it. The fact that (ha!) Ellmann is purposely blunt about her views (instead of padding them with academic talk) and speaks in didactic short sentences and uses rhetoric means that the listener gets angry in the process. I admire her even when I don't agree with her. I thought her Goldsmiths talk was on form.

Location of New Statesman - London
I may have this wrong but I think ............
3 of 4 judges live in London
5 of 6 authors live in London
3 of the 6 authors are alumni of a South London university near to Goldsmith
4 of the 6 books set in London
5 of the 5 shorlisted publishers based in London
Population of London as percentage of UK and Ireland - less than 15%
Time to level up literature

Another of the authors is from Ireland originally. Another from Birmingham and Jamaica. Why do they feel more at home in London? (I don't know but I have my suspicions)
It's not like they've picked 5 authors from London backgrounds. It's that the 5 authors from diverse backgrounds who they've picked have chosen to live in London rather than the rest of the UK/Ireland.

The eligibility doesn't require that (and indeed extends to US writers) but I would suspect/hope it makes them deliberately less London centric.
And having posted on the A Shock thread that perhaps Luckenbooth (set in Scotland) would have been a better choice than A Shock, they indeed picked Luckenbooth.
Also: a novel by someone who lives in Norwich (but who set his book in London I think); an Irish novel/memoir albeit that was eligible last year; a novel set on an oil rig/Aberdeen (but from an author who moved during the book from London to Aberdeen to have an affair with a married oil worker).
And they longlisted Musa Okwonga's novel whose a refutation to my London = accepting point, as he moved to Berlin which he finds much more accommodating.
Also Mrs Death Misses Death - which would have been a better choice than This One Sky Day. Except that one is set in London, written by someone who lives in London, but from a a Jamaican/Irish background so takes us back to the Goldsmiths point.
And it also longlisted A River Called Time (set in alternative London), Diary of a Film (ineligible as author studied at Goldsmiths University), Open Water (set in South London), My Phantoms (author born in London, moved to Manchester, now I think back in London). So they ended up quite London-centric as well despite trying otherwise.

They even bought in Neil in as a judge one year :-)


https://twitter.com/GoldsmithsPrize/s...
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-go...


It's a shame this year because my Goldsmiths reading has been very much a "game of two halves". Prior to the shortlist announcement, I read 3 books that then appeared on the list. I loved all three of those (Assembly, Sterling Karat Gold and Checkout 19). Then, after the announcement, I read, or at least tried to read, the other 3. This second half of the game was rather disappointing, although I know I am in a minority when I say that.
I went into little scratch with really high expectations but felt disappointed at the end. I thought A Shock was interesting but it didn't grab my attention like the three I read before the announcement. And I'm afraid I abandoned This One Sky Day.
Shame. But I'm really glad others are getting more out of the books than I did.




I’d like to see a photo of the book barn GY has curated.

I liked the first chapter of A Shock as well, found the second just okay, and hated the third. I've not picked it up in 3 days.

I will get back to A Shock, I just wanted some Halloween reading.





As these things go (shortlist readings) I thought that was quite poor or perhaps poorly chaired.
I think they work better when each author briefly introduces their book, reads and then answers a few short questions from the chair. As it was they all read in turn with very limited or no introduction and then there were no individual questions but straight to audience questions (which themselves had a few awkward silences).
Further I think the chair did not do a good job of ensuring people had equal chances to speak (I am sure many of us have chaired panels at conferences in our jobs and the key roles are to gently shut down those who speak too much and draw in all the members - for example by directly asking the quieter members a question which you know they would be interested to answer).
Natasha Brown in particular gave a brief reading (whereas others read for much longer) and was then largely marginalised in the discussion - particularly ironical given some of the discussions that were taking place about how black voices are marginalised in publishing!
Anyway as I say deliberately provocative and its maybe my negative reaction is influenced because I missed being able to chat to the authors (plus a few other publishing figures) informally before and after which is what makes the Goldsmiths readings such a good event normally.

(As an aside when I started typing “must” on this post, I incorrectly entered “mi….” and my iphone autocorrect suggested “Misterhobgoblin”!)

And I agree about the event in general. I was a bit disappointed although prior commitments meant I only listened to the first hour and a bit.


I have seen Natasha Brown in other book events. She appears to be naturally shy and retiring and answers questions as briefly as possible.
Neil wrote: "I only listened to the first hour and a bit"
It finished a few minutes later so you didn't miss much
Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer wrote: "
As these things go (shortlist readings) I thought that was quite poor or perhaps poorly chaired. "
I was going to say exactly the same thing. He only involved all of them in the first question, and didn't attempt to draw out Natasha Brown's thoughts on anything else at all.
It finished a few minutes later so you didn't miss much
Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer wrote: "
As these things go (shortlist readings) I thought that was quite poor or perhaps poorly chaired. "
I was going to say exactly the same thing. He only involved all of them in the first question, and didn't attempt to draw out Natasha Brown's thoughts on anything else at all.

I guess it went wrong after that.
Who was the host? The normal chap from the NS is very good.

That’s my problem too, Paul, I don’t really have a need for audio books and they sometimes cost more than books.


You omitted Play tickets £20 - the most expensive part of all and also I suspect essential to really get the work

Incidentally I see the play comes with a “strong language” warning. One of the reasons I had to abandon the audiobook was that I had forgotten how much swearing there is and or really wasn’t great with a 9 year old in the house (who proudly tells me she knows 2 swear words but not some of those on the audio)
(And no, I don’t listen on headphones - can’t get on with the in-ear ones as they always fall out, and I spent my working life with the large ones clamped on my head so no desire to do that out of work)
Books mentioned in this topic
Sterling Karat Gold (other topics)Assembly (other topics)
Checkout 19 (other topics)
little scratch (other topics)
The Hours Before Dawn (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Keith Ridgway (other topics)Claire-Louise Bennett (other topics)
Natasha Brown (other topics)
Leone Ross (other topics)
Isabel Waidner (other topics)
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