The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
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Booker Prize for Fiction
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2023 Booker Prize speculation
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Ruben
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Jul 30, 2023 01:38AM

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Not sure that happens every year - The Island eas the last one I recall.."
It's a novel prize, and yet every year there is a tome.
But the arguably in that sentence is key - there always seems to be a debate at least.

For the Booker self-publishing doesn't count as publishing so I assume a previously self-published book would be eligible if later third-party-published and submitted.

"Where an author or his/her agent require submission as a condition of a work’s publishing contract that work will not be eligible"

"Where an author or his/her agent require submission as a condition of a work’s publishing contract that wor..."
That's an intriguing rule and an intriguing rumor!

Paul called out Girl Woman Other months ahead of longlist also.
I would say Demon Copperhead - when I read it I said in my review it would win lots of prizes but that’s already happened and to a high degree - had it not have won the WP and Pulitzer I think it was an extremely likely winner.
So I think I would be left with one of Hungry Ghosts, Cuddy and Soldier, Sailor ?





One of our members, I believe it was MisterHobgoblin (sorry if I’m wrong!) upon reading Lincoln in the Bardo declared “this will win the Booker.” And at that point, it hadn’t even been longlisted yet

MHG was also the one of us (possibly the only one) already familiar with and a fan of Anna Burns work - although he had not read Milkman before the longlist so had not called it.



Top Scorers
1st Demon Copperhead
=2nd Biography of X
=2nd This Other Eden
4th Wandering Souls
5th Chain Gang All-Stars
=6th The New Life
=6th Close to Home
8th Hungry Ghosts
9th The Sun Walks Down
10th The Fraud
11th Soldier Sailor
12th In Memoriam
=13th The Hero of this Book
=13th The Covenant of Water
=13th The Wren, the Wren
Other High-ish Scorers that haven’t been mentioned much:
Small Mercies, Maame, The Rachel Incident, If I Survive You, The Great Reclamation, Y/N, Where I End, Translation State, We All Want Impossible Things, Hello Beautiful, Open Throat.
The "Big Names" that scored low(er than I expected):
Victory City (61st), Lucy By the Sea (95th), I am Homeless if this is not my Home (132nd), The Shards (188th), The Late Americans (192nd), Yellowface (194th).

I says it would have to be a novel which testified to the historical veracity of Shakespeare - which is why I think he might push The East Indian.

Yes, that is one that I expected to show up on more prediction lists than it has.

Not to put you off at all, but I was quite engrossed in the beginning parts and then realized about a third of the way through that parts of the story were engaging me much more than other parts.


The blurb begins: "An epic, sweeping historical debut novel spanning continents and a century"
That's when I knew this one wasn't for me.

That's very clever David!

I agree History of Burnjng is a contender although it did not quite work for me.

In general, plum wine is a good metaphor for the book. Easy to drink, you don't have to think too hard. Even though it's tempting to hate on plum wine, plum wine never pretends it's something it's not.
Verghese is fairly transparent in interviews that all he set out to do was tell an engrossing story. That it romanticizes child marriage, tells late colonial history through the lens of British/European characters, and features white saviors with impunity (Rune - wow) all seem to be beside the point. This is plum wine, after all.

I says it would have to be a novel which testified to the ..."
One of the judges has said he hasn't enjoyed reading the books??

I says it would ha..."
Shapiro definitely seems life the toughest one of the five to please.

I agree History of Burnjng is a contender although it did not quite work for me."
Then I'm actually quite pleased that you are liking it.

That’s a good point, actually. We have flash fiction, short stories, novellas, and novels. Why isn’t tome recognized as a style or category like the aforementioned? The 2023 Paul Fulcher Prize for Tomes.

Well the prize already exists but uniquely amongst prizes actively discourages any entries or indeed the existence of any eligible books.
But perhaps I should allow entries with the prize of being a decent editor, cosponsored by Readers Digest who will bring out the resulting condensed version.

"Where an author or his/her agent require submission as a condition of a work’s publishing cont..."
I agree--this rule is new to me, although upon reflection not surprising. I am dying to know more abut those rumors. Isn't there a way to give us an oblique hint?

I would love to see Deborah Levy win the Booker--I know she has been on the short list before, but am I correct that she has never won? I loved August Blue.

But that rule has existed for some time and I suspect is more a deterrent than enforced.
The International Booker doesn’t really enforce it fully as the rule also says the condition of publication can’t involve someone else paying money to the publisher for publication but in practice a lot of translated work comes with stapled grants. Suspect it isn’t designed to stop that sort of thing - more vanity publishing.

Ha. I think that contract clause sounds pretty good!

The blurb begins: "An epic, sweeping historical debut novel spanning continents and a centur..."
Have to admit I'm a bit of a fan of that sort of thing!.
I'm intrigued by the following quote from Adjoa Andoh. I loved Ancestor Stones and I think A History of Burning has a similar tone and feel about it.
Aminatta Forna’s Ancestor Stones does the same history smuggling brilliantly. It’s about Sierra Leone, where her father was from and she grew up till the age of nine. The story is told through the lives of various of her aunts and encompasses the family and the nation’s history going back to the late 1700s, right through to the present day. Through the storytelling of these women, you get the story of the nation before and through colonisation and into independence. I love books that are delivering many things at the same time.



It would be interesting to me if this type of historical fiction worked for Shapiro more than, say, The Fraud. I liked The Secret Diary but ultimately felt that it was a bit too all over the place and not sufficiently cohesive.

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