The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
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Booker Prize for Fiction
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2023 Booker Prize speculation

With regard to Reproduction, I can imagine the publishers are wary of making this novel generally available, because it's a winding and convoluted mystery of a book, circling around its themes rather than stating them directly, and that kind of story would drive most readers straight toward the 1-star category. But why they would reject you, David, I don't understand. Also why they'd have a goodreads giveaway although part of the strategy there, I think, is that signing up for a giveaway auto-populates people's "want to read" shelf, and makes it pop up on other people's timelines so that they see the book and the cover, too. That may make a giveaway very attractive to publishers, esp. if the number of copies offered is small. A lot of the winners won't read it, anyway, but the book will have made itself known to many people on goodreads. That's a lot of free advertising.
The Kirkus review does a good job, I think, of explaining what the reader is in for:
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-re...




Unlikely contender unless we get a combination of US-focused judges (e.g., 2000) and judges who like brevity (e.g., 2022 chair).
What was misleading about the blurb?


That's a good review from Kirkus. I've noticed Kirkus has gotten better over the last few years at giving a more insightful comment. It used to feel like Kirkus was just paraphrasing the publisher's blurb.


https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-re...
https://www.frieze.com/article/johann...
It may be too niche for the Booker, but I wouldn't rule it out.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I have to say I thought it was superficially done - I guess if someone publishes a 15,000 word novel I expect each word to be crafted not ideas that simply are not followed through.
I think it might have worked as one of a short story collection.


But Director of prize (not the judges) has discretion to overrule that.


https://www.theguardian.com/books/202...
It includes:
“In 2009, a Texas university acquired McCarthy’s 98-box archive, which included notes for an unfinished novel with the working title of The Passenger; however, the notes were restricted until publication. The acquisition revealed that McCarthy was then working on three novels – but there has been no update in the decade since”
I have a feeling someone drafted an obituary a few years back and it had not been updated.
I suspect a rapid correction might be coming.

In 2009, a Texas university acquired McCarthy’s 98-box archive, which revealed that McCarthy was then working on three novels. More than a decade later, two of them were released in 2022: The Passenger and Stella Maris, two connected novels that follow Bobby and Alicia Western, two siblings who are tormented by the legacy of their physicist father, who helped develop the atom bomb




Not sure I agree on the most glaring though.
"Also, polysyndeton is the use of conjunctions, not conjugations"
I mean that's pretty damning. Surely every knows what polysomething means. How did that slip through.
Interesting that the other author most in the news at the moment is known for her use of asyndeton in the title of her most famous book

it is



Personally, I would be fine to see it longlisted but I wouldn't be overly satisfied if it won. It was wonderfully written, but it absolutely didn't need to be 650 pages (and this is coming from someone who enjoys longer narratives!).


Kirkus: https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-re...

I have an ARC but not started it yet - I've also been hearing good things about it.

There's usually room on the longlist for at least one of those.

Good to hear, I'm reading The Late Americans, the first of his I've read and so far I'm really impressed, the writing is so controlled and accomplished, and I like the intensity of the commentary on American society and late capitalism, and the mix of clarity and tenderness in his treatment of his characters. I was also ridiculously pleased that I picked up on some of the strands and influences, the homage to writers like Zola and James but also the harking back to the "dirty realism" of people like Raymond Carver.

That's where Taylor shines - prose that is both lush and restrained. Writing in the mold of Henry James and Raymond Carver, focusing on millennial characters but also concerned with structural collapse, seems like a good description of his approach.

That's where Taylor shines - prose that is both lush and restrained. Writing in the mold of Henr..."
So why do so many people on the thread seem to have an issue with his work? It's quite refreshing to read something where the writing stands out, although it does highlight the impoverished prose style common to a number of contemporary literary novels I've encountered recently. Although I can't decide if he's essentially ventriloquising or whether he's doing something more interesting or whether it matters either way! Does sometimes make me think of those old Oxford assignments famous for requiring students to rewrite passages in the style of specific authors. The second episode in the book, for example, seems to be a reply to Carver's story 'What we talk about when we talk about love' mingled with a curious echo of Hubert Selby Jr's work or at least a particular strand of American writing that centres on working-class masculinity. Although I like Carver, and Selby Jr for that matter, so works for me.


This is more like the other Taylor we've been reading so focused on the community as a whole, some students, some townies and there's a Whartonesque feel in that he's exploring an enclosed social setting which has its own rules, conventions, tensions.


But I have absolutely no doubt as to his immense writing talent.
He definitely divides opinions - the Guardian/Observer have printed two reviews in the last week - one hailing it as near genius (a class act) and one identifying what the reviewer sees as a whole series of flaws (a university challenge)
https://amp.theguardian.com/books/202...
https://amp.theguardian.com/books/202...
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The extract reminds me a lot of A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder but I assume the main book does something much more interesting.
The other weird one was Mister Mister - I got it months pre publication but - for ages I held my review back as some things in the book kind of triggered me and I wanted to read some other reviews. But in the end I was the only one to review on NG and there were no other reviews on Goodreads pre publication. I would be surprised if other people did not request it given how many prize nominations and awards the author’s debut received.