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The Goldsmiths Prize
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2022 Goldsmiths Prize speculation
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Nov 11, 2021 01:29AM

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Feeling the bar is set high for the first post on this thread as one year we managed 4/6 and this year 3/6! So I will treat this as a marker post and give it some thought and perhaps 'freeze' my predictions in January.
Curandera by Irenosen Okojie is my current favourite to win
Poguemahone by Patrick McCabe if it lives up to its billing
Ali Smith's new novel Companion Piece: The follow-up to the Seasonal Quartet may be a contender
My Mind To Me A Kingdom Is by Paul Stanbridge, if it's anything like his last may be too Goldsmiths for the Goldsmiths!
Perhaps Emergency by Daisy Hildyard
[Tell Me I'm Worthless would have been one, but published 3 days too early]

https://www.ucu.org.uk/article/11947/...
You wonder what this means for the prize - I did speculate last year if the future was part of the reason for not having a shortlist event or the lecture in person … but on this basis you can see people refusing to be judges.


They’ve named the judges
Authors Ali Smith and Natasha Brown will judge the 10th Goldsmiths Prize, joined by the New Statesman’s Tom Gatti and prize founder Dr Tim Parnell
Parnell is the Chair and is from Goldsmiths
The shortlist is due to be announced on 5th October and the winner on 9th November


In the days when the shortlist was announced at the end of the Goldsmiths lecture I recall on a couple of occasions Tim Parnell asking us afterwards what our first impressions were of the list


28 January – submissions open
1 April – submissions close
5 October – six-book shortlist announced
9 November – winner announced





The link I gave about the boycott refers to a redundancy programme and a ranking of people to be made redundant but presumably there is a lot more besides as otherwise I suspect there is hardly a medium or large company anywhere in the Uk that should not also be boycotted - I have certainly seen those programmes pretty well every where I have worked and even had to run them on occasions.

There's also a tendency to have a number of people in higher management on over-inflated salaries, so end up with lots of those plus a few permanent, experienced academics, who are then left to deal with an army of low-paid, part-timers.
You can find more information on the relevant Twitter feed
https://twitter.com/GoldsmithsUCU

Not seeing that many other obvious contenders so far.
Interesting book published today though - Your Show by Ashley Hickson-Lovence which is a Red and the Dead style fictionalised biography of the first black top flight referee, Uriah Rennie. If any of the jury are football fans could be a contender.


Any thoughts from anyone else - ARCs read or Booker tips which might be Goldsmiths contenders? Or indeed ones I have added to the Listopia which you think “have you actually read it?” (Answer - probably not).

Perhaps none. I lose track of prize eligibility and which prizes include commonwealth nations.

Although oddly most UK prizes treat Ireland as part of the UK.

https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/...
Greater profile for a star name - or a bit of distancing from Goldsmiths the institution?
Karl Ove Knausgård will launch the tenth anniversary celebrations of the Goldsmiths Prize this autumn with an event at the Southbank Centre. The acclaimed Norwegian author, best known for his My Struggle series, will deliver the annual New Statesman/Goldsmiths Prize lecture on “why the novel matters” at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 22 October as part of the centre’s London Literature Festival.
The Goldsmiths Prize, which runs in partnership with the New Statesman, awards “fiction at its most novel”, celebrating literature that “breaks the mould or extends the possibilities of the novel form”. Winners of the prize during its first decade include Eimear McBride for A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing, Ali Smith for How to Be Both, and Isabel Waidner for Sterling Karat Gold. The New Statesman/Goldsmiths Prize lecture was first delivered in 2016 by Howard Jacobson; subsequent lecturers included Elif Shafak and Bernardine Evaristo, who argued against the continuing dominance of the white male canon.
Also kicking off the prize’s tenth anniversary celebrations at the Southbank Centre on 22 October are Ali Smith and previous Goldsmiths-shortlisted novelists Natasha Brown and Guy Gunaratne. They will discuss their fantasy Goldsmiths Prize winner – a favourite innovative novel published before the award was founded. Both events will also be livestreamed. Other speakers at the London Literature Festival include Greta Thunberg, Malorie Blackman and George Saunders.


And actually dates don’t tie up as shortlist is pencilled in for 5 October and these are 20 October.
https://www.southbankcentre.co.uk/wha...
https://www.southbankcentre.co.uk/wha...


Ali Smith is a Garner fan, she's written about him more than once including contributing to a book of essays about his writing First Light: A Celebration of Alan Garner
But does the book actually fit the publication dates for the prize?
I'm not sure it does. But experts will know!

As was Case Study.
And I am not sure about books with more than one author - the rules implicitly assume a sole author.

How retrograde. Get with the times, Goldsmiths.

I've just checked the 4th Estate Catalogue - 30 September 2021. Too bad because this year Ali Smith is a judge. Thank you, Alwynne, for letting us know that she is a Garner's fan.

And the previous book the two co-authored was actually released as by one of them (with the other just thanked in the acknowledgements) in part to make it eligible for prizes.

After your world-famous agency had read the full manuscript and you'd revealed by contribution they expressed unease. Your publisher reacted similarly: what if I wanted my name on the cover...? Would I want paying? What about the terms and conditions for literary prizes

I've just checked the 4th Estate Catalogue - 30 September 2021. Too bad because this year..."
I thought his influence seemed particularly strong in Companion Piece

Unless the prize overlooked it being ineligible by one day (this year is from 1 Oct 2021).
Amazon has it as published on 28 October 2021. Which would make it Booker but not Goldsmiths eligible this year.

I still remember being asked by an author to edit their biography on Goodreads which said, incorrectly, that they lectured at Goldsmiths (I suspect they were concerned about being deemed ineligible).
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Books mentioned in this topic
Companion Piece (other topics)Treacle Walker (other topics)
First Light: A celebration of Alan Garner (other topics)
Treacle Walker (other topics)
Your Show (other topics)
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