The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
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Booker Prize for Fiction
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2022 Booker Prize longlist discussion
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Stuart
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Jul 26, 2022 09:09AM

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I haven't read the Pradeep Mathew book, but I do have it. My son gave it to me a few months ago. (He likes to find "strange" books for me & this is one he came up with.) I just ordered Seven Moons so hopefully I'll get it in a few weeks.
Ordered the remaining 10 from Blackwells - £123.74 so I'd better not buy anything else before the Goldsmiths list!

me either, and this one as well The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida
On my way to my first face to face book group since 2020 now, at Five Leaves. The book is The Island of Missing Trees, and I haven't found time to reread it. Suspect they will do the traditional Booker winner in December.

A great way to begin! Here is Eric Karl Anderson's summary:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJXr7...

I have a question. I've had a few mental health issues recently and it's made it harder for me to focus on reading. If anybody has thoughts on which books are a bit more straightforward /easier to digest please let me know. Hopefully checking a few of those off will then motivate me to go for some of the more challenging ones on the list later. Thank you!

Booth and Oh, William! would be my first guess.
The Trees is straightforward in the way it is written but a little tangly about what it all means.

The only thing I can see to criticise is the lack of geographic diversity - a shame after the Booker remembered Canada, Aus/NZ existed let alone other areas.
6 US authors plus one who lived there the last 20 or more years
5 UK/Ireland
Leaving just 1 from the rest of the world.



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I think the problem with Booth is that we were expecting it to be about him, and then get to the Authors Note at the end only to find out what the real intention was. I wished I'd had that context at the beginning. It made my appreciation of the novel grow in retrospect. I don't read blurbs or descriptions typically so maybe it is mentioned there. I think it deserves to be on the list and am glad it made it.

So honestly I was disappointed by the US domination. And that's as a US resident and Canadian born reader, but also a curmudgeon who didn't like the addition of US writers to the Booker. I have no interest in the subject matter of so many of these. Get off my lawn.


I’ve read Maps of Our Spectacular Bodies and The Colony. The rest I’m not interested in. Yet.




I have The Colony, Trust, Booth, and Case Study. Such a pressure as if they’re disappointing I’ll be annoyed that I wasted the space.
My kindle is broken so I can’t take them all, as I’m taking other books too.




I got very close in 2019 but could not get hold of History of Wolves in time.
I have read 11 of this year now and will I suspect read the 12th tomorrow but I will be frustrated in my aim unless Seven Moons release date is moved up.



The only thing I can see to criticise is the lack of geographic diversity - a shame after the Booker remembered Canada, Aus/NZ existed let alone other ..."
We do get overlooked down here somewhat GY ....

We do get overlooked down here somewhat GY..."
I'll second that thought from New Zealand!


I’m a huge fan of Australian and NZ humor and I used to follow the Miles Franklin Prize. I should again. Surely the Miles Franklin and Stella prize lists included Booker worthy books.


I loved that novel, and how she masterfully blends fiction with facts. still for the moment has no UK publisher but I hope it will get one especially after it longlisting for the center fiction prize

Things like 'Booth' and Karen Jay Fowler do seem an odd choice, I've read some really interesting indie US books recently, it's weird that the US choices are skew so much towards the mainstream.

And compared to what I know of all his other books (eg the three slightly different versions he published of one recent novel or his very metafictional books) it reads more like a film script


I also see this as more of a US book. Not really Booker stuff. I can see it winning some of the American book awards


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