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

Yes, but no more cliché than big literary prizewinners The Narrow Road to the Deep North or All the Light We Cannot See.
I thought the prose was a lot more than decent. I was really in awe of the writing in some of these scenes, no matter how conventional they were. It's confusing, and has me a little depressed, that someone with this skill exhibited such a profound lack of imagination.




I couldn't stomach that one either, or the 'Narrow Road...' for that matter.

Yes, but no more c..."
It's difficult to tell though isn't it, was it the writer or did the agent/publisher steer them in a particular direction - as they tried to do with you - and as a debut novelist they decided to go along with that to get their foot in the door.


Me too, not sure I made it out of the first chapter, certainly not the second.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/202..."
Okay in that case Lark's point about lack of imagination/insight wins. Although I suppose it's not uncommon for novelists to spin a yarn about their influences, interests, it's standard for promotional purposes and the ability to do that is also appealing to publishers. I didn't realise he'd already written a novel though, so even less excuse for nuns etc


The indirect comparison to Chekhov was a step too far for me!


The Bee Sting
Grimmish
The Librarianist
Bandit Queens"
Would love to see Grimmish - not read it yet but loads of people on Twitter I respect have been raving about it for some time



I read an extract that was promising although not at all funny, it seems on one level like a cross between Chuck Paluhniak, Nelson Algren and "Raging Bull" but it's also related via a narrator's uncle who's reminiscent of the men in armchairs who routinely appear in early 20th-century ghost stories by writers like M. R. James. It apparently draws heavily on books like Pessoa's The Book of Disquiet which makes sense as it seems very much a conventionally male-centred novel and I always think of Pessoa as the sort of author carried around by serious-seeming, men who're studying philosophy, alternated with Nietzche or Rilke. But that referential aspect also ties into a more metafictional strand in the narrative or so it seems. I'm very tempted to read it personally because it sounds inventive and I found the style in the extract engaging but not sure when I'll get around to it.

I've seen a couple of reviews say this! That wasn't my experience - I found it more of a 'I am now racked with anxiety, emotionally exhausted, sitting in a corner slowly rocking back and forth and trying not to cry' type of read, but I suppose people interpret things differently! It's very good but oof, never again.

I agree with you. It’s eligible and in fact I am reading it now but there must have been a view it was not at one stage and I noted it did not seem to be on the Listopia until I added it earlier today.

I've seen a couple of reviews say this! That wasn't my experience - I fo..."
Owen we agree again. It has lots of emotions it evokes or could be used to describe it - very funny would be a long way down my list.

The Bee Sting
Grimmish
The Librarianist
Bandit Queens"
Webb is a Cambridge English Literature graduate so might be looking wider and anyway is literary fiction really ever funny when compared to a TV sketch show say or a good stand up comedian.
I liked the last two of the books above but neither even elicited a mild chuckle as far as I can recall.

Yes, but no more c..."
I would be in the “decent” camp.
Tellingly for me I did not highlight any passages as I read as examples of great sentences of paras - in the Lorrie Moore despite its unevenness I was highlighting stuff every page or so. And when I look at the Geary and what others have highlighted (which you can see a bit on Kindle versions) I am thinking each time “ok it’s decently fine but nothing exceptional”.

Claire Kilroy’s new book, Soldier Sailor, is about a woman in the early months of motherhood when everything has been turned upside down. It’s very, very funny. She’s got this wildly unhelpful husband – one of the great husbands in literature, I think.

I read an extract that was promising although not at all funny, it seems..."
For a second I thought you were talking about Soldier sailor. I was so confused lol. Grimmage sounds interesting but I don't know about all the boxing.

Yes, ..."
That's one of the reasons I was so disappointed in the Moore, such great writing but for what?

The Bee Sting
Grimmish
The Librarianist
Bandit Queens"
Webb is a Cambridge English Literature gr..."
Definitely lowering my definition of 'comedy' to account for medium! I just wonder if Webb might be interested some titles that draw a smirk rather than a tear.
I believe he's a big fan of both The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and Graham Swift's Waterland, so it could go either way...

Claire Kilroy’s new book, Soldier Sailor, is about a woman in the early months of motherhood when everything has been turned upside down. It’s very, very f..."
To be fair, I did find plenty of the narrator's observations amusing. But very much sentence-level waves of humour amidst an overall sea of anxiety.

I read an extract that was promising although not at all..."
Sorry Yahaira pressed the wrong reply button was responding to your earlier question!



I'll be interested to see what you make of the Crewe.










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This, definitely—if I ever have another editor tell me I should try very hard to write more like Otessa Moshfegh then I don’t know..."
I can only imagine how incredibly frustrating it must be to have to contend with that as a writer who has her own specific vision. I can see why it's so attractive to publishers though it's a version of a franchise or series, a possibility of piggy-backing onto other successful titles and hoping that that will ensure decent sales. And for a debut novelist is possibly a way to get published because they can point to their relevance to a market. Although I wonder how well it works in practice for standalone novels? I assume given the success of Milkman, Claire Foster's work etc that publishers think this one stands a chance of succeeding as a debut by appealing to the readership for those kinds of novels, and the unique selling point for Juno is presumably the queer spin?