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



I added Lone Women to the Listopia. With the right book and the right panel, I could see a LaValle on the Booker longlist.



I liked that it was set in Iowa City for a couple reasons. First, I knew where I was in the book. Second, the Midwestern season changes were subtle, but were very much a part of the story.
The stories were good, but I feel like they needed cohesiveness, and some of the characters were so…whiny.


The publisher sent me an ARC of The Wren, The Wren, which I will get to soon. I certainly hope to like it better than a 3.5! Everything I've picked up by her so far has been an exhilarating 5 stars.


The sense of time and place is interesting - a lot of reviewers have implied the book is set in an unspecified time and even place and one gets that sense reading it - but it’s explicitly set in England and a series of breadcrumbs mean it’s set in the late 1989s/early 1990s (even though that makes some of the text seem possibly anachronistic)

The author has already picked up a British Book Award Nibbie this year (and a Nebula award year) for her historical fantasy epic Babel: Or the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution.
A book which is entirely about the publishing industry including awards, twitter storms, Goodreads flaming etc would be a very interesting edition to the longlist (not sure I would think it merited going further).
The book was released recently to quite some hype and is already topping best seller charts even in UK plus seems to be close to ubiquitous on Bookstagram.

I did listen to the book. The narrator might have made the characters that way with his intonations.
Class, ethnicity, etc. weren’t what I considered whiny. What bothered me was how some of the characters in relationships treated their partners. It seemed that they were on the edge of abusive with the complaining and put downs.

The author has already picked up a British Book Award Nibbie this year (and a Nebula award year) for her historical fantasy epic Babel: Or the Necessity..."
I liked Yellowface a lot more than Babel and the first Poppy war book. (I didn’t continue the series). It felt more cohesive.

I'd love to see it win.



Was number 1 on launch in UK - not sure what has happened since.

I think it would be a fun addition to the longlist but not to go further.


It's even more niche when you read it David.


To me, it was much more than that. Certainly it spotlights the publishing industry. And it also shows the struggles, confusion, and loneliness of young authors, as well as misconceptions about those who are successful and those not so much. But what I found brave about the book was the ways in which it looked at how we are becoming more & more pigeonholed (rather than less) -- by race, by gender, by sexuality, by culture, by origins, by religions and politics -- unless we find our way out of this, all of us in both literature and real life will find ourselves reduced to speaking only about our own navels.

Might just be my perception of the marketing though!





I always like it when the Booker has books that can be taken as being in conversation.
What about The Long Form (which admittedly feels more Goldsmith-y) and Soldier, Sailor (which is getting very strong reviews in the media and here) - I am trying both back to back this week.

I always like it when the Booker has books that can be taken as being in conversation.
What about The Long Form (which admittedly feels more Goldsmith-y) and ..."
Soldier Sailor is an accomplished novel. It reminds somehow of Second Place as they are almost the same writing style and atmosphere. I would not be surpsied to see it longlisted


It reminded me a lot of Gwendoline Riley’s work (who really should have been nominated for My Phantoms).

I'm interested to see your take on The Long Form, GY. I pre-ordered it from Dorothy Project after seeing reviews from Alwynne, RC, Paul, and others, but it doesn't come out here until October.

I agree, also not sure that the WP or similar fits with her brand, it tends to skew towards a different market than the one I assume she's aiming for. I also don't think she needs that kind of recognition.


You may well not, and the authors may well not but if they're with large publishing houses, as Kuang is, then marketing is central, even what the author looks like can be a significant factor in their books being taken on, in terms of how it impacts on the ability to build the author's brand. It's one of the things Kuang's talking about in books like 'Yellowface' in terms of not wanting to be reads as an 'Asian American' author. Also in terms of the mass of Kuang readers, she has associations linked to her as a brand, and those readers tend to be part of a demographic that skews younger and wouldn't want to be associated themselves with authors they perceive as producing 'dad lit' for example. I often, for example, avoid the titles on the WP shortlist as I associate it with a kind of book I don't tend to like or see as reflecting my identity as a reader.
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This author was long listed in 2020 which majored in American based authors and debut authors - with Douglas Stuart winning
The leaked longlist was 2018 - and has your favourite winner of the last very many years I think in Anna Burns