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

I read it as an ARC many months ago David. The writing is very strong, but I found the story unrelentingly bleak and very hard to embrace. The fact that is is based on history probably made it more so. I agree with GY that is a very likely longlist contender but it won't be a book that I will personally root for.

Another book that has popped on my radar after a bit of bookshop browsing today: The Great Reclamation by Rachel Heng. It's another sweeping historical novel, this one set in Singapore.

Do we have enough of these to make a longlist full of sweeping historical novels yet? Feels like it’s been a really strong year for them


This does look great - I love David Naimon's interviews, but I think I might read it before listening. (I adored his series of interviews with authors revolving around the works of Ursula LeGuin.)

I think there is a personal issue also with this one in that I am just back from spending a few days with my colleagues in Israel

Enter Ghost and Birnam Wood are the two that spring to mind - even if I was not a great fan of either.
There is Lady MacBethad but not sure if that is Booker-y, I have not read it but it felt like it was a slightly surprising WP longlist omission.
Any others?

Edit: Seems there is. One of the reviews says the main character based on a minor character from A Midsummer Night's Dream.



Exactly right I believe




Have you posted your personal shortlist here? Sorry if I missed it.

But it would currently include
Losing The Plot
Hungry Ghosts
Corey Fah Does Social Media
And 3 of
Cuddy
The New Life
Demon Copperhead
Soldier Sailor
The North Shore
This Other Eden
Very much not a prediction just those books I not just thought very good but felt particularly drawn to

But it would currently include
Losing The Plot
Hungry Ghosts
Corey Fah Does Social Media"
Nice! I see The Long Form making my personal shortlist. It starts slowly (perhaps intentionally so), capturing the tedium and exhaustion of early motherhood, but becomes more compulsive over time. I am now thoroughly engrossed!

I'm still not sure if it's eligible, though, since I think it was originally self-published.

This is the longlist I'd like to see, a mix of books I've enjoyed and books I'd like to read:
- The Long Form - Kate Briggs
- Fire Rush - Jacqueline Crooks
- Never Was - H. Gareth Gavin
- Your Love Is Not Good - Johanna Hedva
- Hungry Ghosts - Kevin Hosein
- Sylvia - Maithreyi Karnoor
- The MANIAC - Benjamin Labatut
- August Blue - Deborah Levy
- Losing the Plot - Derek Owusu
- Mrs. S - K. Patrick
- The Fraud - Zadie Smith
- Corey Fah Does Social Mobility - Isabel Waidner
- Grimmish - Michael Winkler

Grimmish should be eligible. The key constraint is when it was first published outside of UK and even if one counts the first self publishing that was 1 Jan 2021 which is inside the 1 Oct 2020 cutoff.
Love the nod in Grimmish to the goat meme (https://www.tiktok.com/@ivyandsophies...)

And would any jury actually do that? I guess as a Chair it’s a useful Solomon-like threat if two judges are fighting over the last book. “How about we pick neither?”

Excellent list. Pleased to see The Way The Day Breaks - would be pretty much at the top of my list but little mention of it on this thread.

Corey Fah Does Social Mobility
The Way the Day Breaks
The Long Form
Losing the Plot
Grimmish
The End of Nightwork
Quinn
Hungry Ghosts
Where I End
The Sleeping Car Porter
With or Without Angels
Riambel
BERLIN W, Or, mésalliance.
Some on that list, particularly last 2-3, not likely to make it. These ones didn't quite make my list but are more likely to appear and I'd be pleased to see them:
Cuddy
Shy
August Blue
Biography of X (though some interesting copyright issues)
Mrs. S
Only going on ones I've read - which for English language literature from large presses is a rather small sample set!

- The Long Form - Kate Briggs
- Fire Rush - Jacqueline Crooks
- ..."
I would be extremely happy with this list!

Great list too. I hadn't heard of the Roberts. It looks like another good one from Weatherglass.
On Grimmish, I wonder if the marketing for the book will hold it back or if that's even something the judges will see. For instance, the blurb on the front cover says, "The strangest book you are likely to read this year." Grimmish is a lot of things, but I wouldn't characterize it like that. It's one of the most nuanced meditations on the intersection of race and masculinity - and how they are both constructed and performed - that I've ever read.


It's not unlike The Trees in that respect, although there are major differences between the books.


The best book about the Israeli occupation of Palestine I’ve read is The Lemon Tree: An Arab, a Jew, and the Heart of the Middle East.


David, you’re selling me on Grimmish, and I’m always up for supporting Coach House.

That’s right. I loved that book.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8MNe...
Small Worlds
Mrs. S
The Fraud
Biography of X
In Ascension
Wandering Souls
Birnam Wood
The New Life
Demon Copperhead
In Memoriam
Soldier Sailor
The House of Doors
Cuddy




- North Woods by Daniel Mason
- Kala by Colin Walsh
- Riambel by Priya Hein
- Chrysalis by Anna Metcalfe
- Falling Animals by Sheila Armstrong
- In Ascension by Martin Mckinnes
- The Long Form by Kate Briggs
- The House of Doors by Tan Twan Eng
- The Vaster Wilds by Lauren Groff
- Victory City by Salman Rushdie
- This Other Eden by Paul Harding
- The Covenant of Water by Abraham Varghese
- Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver


August Blue
Kick the Latch
This Other Eden
Soldier Sailor
Fire Rush
For Thy great pa..."
Inspired by your list and a visit to a bookshop between Kings Lynn and Norwich I read For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain and thought it was excellent.



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I read Sylvia twice, the second time to see how its stories interlock given they are temporally mixed. If it's Booker level, and judges like it or Neem Tree can submit it, then it's longlist at best, in my opinion.