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Booker Prize for Fiction
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2023 Booker Prize speculation



The ‘Booker Dozen’ of 12 or 13 books will be announced on August 1, 2023 with the shortlist of six books to follow on September 21. The winner of the £50,000 prize will be announced on November 26, 2023.



Longlist: 26 Jul
Shortlist: 6-Sep
Winner: 17-Oct
This year
Longlist 1 Aug
Shortlist 21 Sep
Winner 26 Nov
So a more extended process.
Last year:
Long-short 7 and a bit weeks
Short-winner 9.5 weeks
This year:
Long-short 6 weeks
Short-winner 6 weeks
Which means if anyone does try to read the longlist by early August they will have almost 4 months to wait to find out who won!

Although I would love one day to have read the whole of a longlist of a prize pre announcement (excluding of course the RoC).
I have never beat 10/13 for the Booker.


Think my best on a longlist (other than RoC where have more than one 100%) is 9/13 from last year's International Booker - which was without trying just from books I naturally read and says more about that list than about my reading.
And 5/6 for the Goldsmiths one year, which is the one I probably do more seek out possible contenders.



It is oddly delayed though - I wonder why.

The Women's Prize allocates 7 weeks for the longlist, and another 7 for the shortlist. That seems about right to me.




.. but that's a bit cheating!
In its more recent form of the IB, yes the first I think.
I hadn't actually realised this one was in English - interested he's switched language.

Only written two novels - one long listed and one shortlisted and now about to publish his first Novel for 11 years.
Adds an International flavour to any list as well.
And he is currently a Booker International judge.
Now putting aside the fact this might disqualify him in the eyes of the hard core Booker International fans given this years longlist does that increase his chances (it definitely would on the Goldsmith with its revolving two way door if judges and shortlistees).
Has anyone read his latest. I am part way through.

I can't believe it's been 11 years since his last book. The 2012 Booker shortlist was:
- Bringing Up the Bodies (winner)
- The Garden of Evening Mists
- Swimming Home
- The Lighthouse
- Umbrella
- Narcopolis
The Booker has gotten so much more diverse in terms of storytelling styles in the last 11 years, although the last two on that list are interesting entries to the shortlist in retrospect.


It is getting glowing reviews from the press. It is about motherhood, written as a monologue. It reminds somehow of Die, My Love
Real contender for the longlist


I heard that Verghese modeled the matriarch on his own grandmother.




The Covenant of Water kept me up late last night. This may be the best book I have read this year. Hungry Ghosts, In Memoriam and The New Life right up there though.


I just reviewed the Labatut
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
To be honest I was slightly disappointed compared to its predecessor - it felt particularly let down by the last quarter and also (but reacted) too non fictional
It’s still a very good read



Before that though, the first 75% or so would have been 5 stars from me, though the 'fiction' label is problematic. I guess it comes from the fact that most of it is fictionalised oral testimonies on von Neumann based on, but not directly quoted from, factual sources.
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That helps me with my 'avoid' list, I hated All the Light We Cannot See!