The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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Case Study
Booker Prize for Fiction
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2022 Booker Longlist - Case Study
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Jul 26, 2022 05:06AM


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I guess I’ll be reading this too.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog...


https://twitter.com/gmacraeburnet/sta...
Congratulations Robert, always nice to get that reaction. Interestingly McCrae Burnet copied in Dan James of Ezra Maas fame suggesting he take a look


I guess I missed out on that - IG algorithm is a bit funny


https://www.theguardian.com/books/202...


Part of my positivity on this is due to being pleasantly surprised.



Just saw this Robert. Terrific!!!!"
Thanks!
David wrote: "Very surprised this has slipped to the bottom of our rankings. I'm about a third of the way through (finished Second Notebook) and see this really working for me. I like the 1960s setting which see..."
Up to 12th on that first list but I don't think any of the 13 is a book there will be a consensus of dislike for this year. I am still in the early stages but enjoying it.
Up to 12th on that first list but I don't think any of the 13 is a book there will be a consensus of dislike for this year. I am still in the early stages but enjoying it.


I am a fan of GMB and read all his previous novels so it's also surprising for me this will very likely fall outside my top-10... But as GY says: the quality of the longlist seems very high this year.

Part of my positivity on this is due to being pleasantly surprised."
It's really just that I am bored when I read it. I guess I need to let it run for a while longer before making any definite decisions about my feelings on it, but I find myself increasingly frustrated as I read it because it doesn't seem to go anywhere. Well, not anywhere that is interesting me at the moment, anyway. 25% in and it's sitting at the bottom of my rankings so it has some work to do in the other three-quarters!

Neil I think your “not anywhere interesting to me” was my issue as well but I did find it entertaining and I did like the way some parts of it developed - there is (at least I thought) a great attempted seduction scene in a pub with three characters but only two people

I may still switch those around, but I tend to rate very much on the basis of 'how much did I enjoy reading this' rather than a profound appraisal (for which I am far less qualified than most of us here!). The Colony is giving much more food for thought though than Trust...
The seduction scene was indeed a highlight of Case Study (but unfortunately that was the last we saw of Tom).



How can you not care about these wonderful characters, Neil??! (joking)



More seriously I did feel the parallel interleaving of the two stories worked well here and still think Diaz took an easier to write but sub-optimal to read route in having his books set out serially.

All that said, I can see why this wouldn’t work for many people.


I was being a tiny bit provocative by saying Case Study is the queerest book on the longlist but I stand by that assessment (with two books yet to read). The element of adopting/changing identities is a classic element of queer art (and survival). Setting this book in the mid- to late-sixties drives that point home. The book is also full of nuanced attention to incongruous details that strongly falls into the genre of camp (again, I would distinguish this from campy). Very well done, even if it does get dry in places.


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