The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Booker Prize for Fiction
>
2022 Booker Prize longlist discussion
message 251:
by
Robert
(new)
Aug 21, 2022 11:42AM

reply
|
flag





https://www.cheltenhamfestivals.com/l...




- it does cost money / take time to film, particularly if done well (e.g. so Q&A can be heard);
- it may stop people attending in person (and indeed 'post-Covid'* great to see people back in person)
But I do think it is a shame - and they could make a modest charge to cover costs.
* or rather in an endemic Covid world

- it does cost money / take time to film, particularly if done well (e.g. so Q&A can be heard);
- it may stop people attending in person (and indeed 'post-Covid'* great to see peop..."
I can see those arguments, but this is a tendency I see in a lot of events, including home-grown ones, that a failure to have an online option really restricts who can attend in terms of mobility/availability. I think as someone with small children, I found Covid a bit refreshing in the sense that I could attend book clubs in the evenings all over the world. Now I get to read GY's notes (still good though!)

- it does cost money / take time to film, particularly if done well (e.g. so Q&A can be heard);
- it may stop people attending in person (and indeed 'post-Covid'* great to see peop..."
I am planning to donate to Edinburgh at the end to express my appreciation for the virtual offerings. Still much cheaper for me than attending as many events as I have already watched (let alone what is still to come) and well worth it. I think charging a small amount for virtual events would be quite fair and would more than cover their costs.



I think the audiences are quite different and I doubt many 'live' attendees are lost to online.
I can't always rustle up friends to come to events with me in London and I don't particularly enjoy the late night train journey home alone.
Like Emily I enjoyed all the online bookclubs during covid - still dip into a few even now!

This is by far the most well curated Booker longlist I have read, with a consistently high quality of the novels. I dislike Nightcrawling, but that is a minor criticism to an otherwise excellent list. And it is the only time I thought multiple books deserved to win: The Colony, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida, Treacle Walker and Maps of Our Spectacular Bodies.

I’ve enjoyed them all, even the few I criticized, so at this point my rankings will be based on which books I’m still thinking about days after finishing them.
I’m going to start at the beginning again with After Sappho and finish it, Nightcrawling should arrive Monday or Tuesday, and I’m making slow progress through Glory, which I think is very funny, but worry that it isn’t engaging enough to sustain 400 pages. I’ve liked the other books, so I’m keeping the faith with Glory.

"well curated" is a good term for what makes this an excellent longlist.


"POTUS@bigbaboonoftheUS" and "Tweeting Baboon of the United States"

Thanks for sharing that, Kathleen. I didn't get far enough into Glory before DNF'ing to see that. I see in the news that he's called "FPOTUS" now, with F = Former. For the record, what I did read of Glory was wonderful, writing-wise, but long form satire rarely works for me. I may try it again for the sake of the writing, especially if it wins.

Thanks for sharing that, Kathleen. I didn't get far enough into Glory before DNF'ing to see that. I see in the..."
I had mixed feelings about the animal characters in the book, but the Tweeting Baboon reference made it totally worth it. :-)


Yes it is!
My son had a talk show at his college’s radio station in 2016, and they were trying to get candidates to come in and give interviews during the Iowa Caucus. They didn’t succeed, but he planned to ask if he could pet the guinea pig on FPOTUS’s head.
btw- I don’t think that F really stands for former..😂

Will you do the same list study as the longlist? that would be amazing!

Looks like Hugh already has that in the works, Mohamed. Should be interesting.
Yes, I was planning to do what we did the last couple of years and collate the predictions of the forum members.
I don't have a problem in principle with extending to other public lists, but there is a limit on how much time I want to spend searching, particularly anything posted via videos or podcasts.
I don't have a problem in principle with extending to other public lists, but there is a limit on how much time I want to spend searching, particularly anything posted via videos or podcasts.

Is this the first time Hugh’s and Paul’s average calculations were so in line? The only difference between the two styles is Treacle Walker and After Sappho.
I’m fairly confident in the first five books I guessed would make the shortlist. I have no real guess for the 6th.

Is this the first time Hugh’s and Paul’s average calculations were so in line? The only difference between the two styles is Treacle Walker and After Sapp..."
Once there are lots of votes they converge. Difference tends to be early on - and also particularly where some people have read lots of books and others very few, or indeed some books are read by lots and some by few.

https://www.waterstones.com/events/wa...
But an event on the Friday before the announcement
Not great for those not in London as late on Friday and no mention of streaming; and not great for me as I will be working in Singapore that week.


https://thebookerprizes.com/events-wh...




Jamie, which book do you see as the winner?
I agree, probably the strongest longlist since 2017 - hope we aren't going to get a similar cull of the group favourites!
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Oh William! (other topics)Glory (other topics)
The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida (other topics)
The Trees (other topics)
Small Things Like These (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Claire Keegan (other topics)NoViolet Bulawayo (other topics)
Shehan Karunatilaka (other topics)
Percival Everett (other topics)
Elizabeth Strout (other topics)
More...