The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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Undiscovered
International Booker Prize
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2024 Int Booker longlist: Undiscovered
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Mar 11, 2024 08:32AM


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One of my pet moans is why English publishers change the names of books rather than just translate them. This one should be Huaco Portrait. The author was asked about this in an interview and her reply was:
I proposed to all my editors that the original title be kept—as a decolonizing agent it’s my job to defend the identity and original dignity of my book. Some listened, while others either half listened or not at all, following commercial criteria. Others, like HarperCollins, convinced me with the best reasoning. From what they tell me, the one who came up with Undiscovered was Juan Mila, my editor. And I liked it for the same reasons you do, because I saw an ambiguity in everything yet to be discovered but also in what cannot and will not be discovered, what is impossible to discover. At least in the translation in my head, although in English, it may not be so ambiguous.=


Had he lived in the twenty-first century, he might have been accused of the worst possible crime an author can be accused of today: writing autofiction.

I finished this today. It averages out to fine. I really enjoyed the legacy of colonialism parts, the story of Charles Wiener, her investigations about him and the boy Juan. I didn't care for the discussion of her personal life, sex life, father's infidelity, etc. - just not that interested. There's a reason I don't read much memoir.



I think we all love a bit of grumpy.

But the latter is done in an uncomplicated, simplistic way. I agree, the short page count doesn't allow the story to breathe.
Solidly in the centre of my ranking.


You're right - and that's my issue with the book: it raises important issues but then treats them in an overly simplistic way without thinking through the implications of what the book is suggesting.

On this list "raises important issues but then treats them in an overly simplistic way" seems to be what the judges are looking for - except I think they'd replace "but" with "and" + "overly simplistic" with "accessible"

The one I wouldn't describe as wholly 'accessible' so far is the Kadare in terms of the ideological discussions and local politics - but I see that as a good thing, it made me feel like I had to step up!

I haven’t made my mind yet. Perhaps I need to read the rest of the books first and let this book sit for a while.

Sounds closer to the experience of reading Violette Leduc, thinking of La Bâtarde

That said, it's much warmer than de Beauvoir's chilly forensic gaze - having let this sit a while in my mind, I might have been a bit harsh with my 3* but 4* feels too high given the flaws.

Books mentioned in this topic
You Dreamed of Empires (other topics)La Bâtarde (other topics)
Undiscovered (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Álvaro Enrigue (other topics)Gabriela Wiener (other topics)