Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Man Booker Prize Longlist 2012

The hotly-awaited longlist for the 2012 Man Booker Prize was announced this afternoon. It looks like this:

Nicola Barker - The Yips (Fourth Estate)
Ned Beauman - The Teleportation Accident (Sceptre)
Andre Brink - Philida (Harvill Secker)
Tan Twan EngThe Garden of Evening Mists (Myrmidon)
Michael Frayn - Skios (Faber & Faber)
Rachel Joyce - The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry (Doubleday)
Deborah Levy - Swimming Home (And Other Stories)
Hilary Mantel - Bring Up the Bodies (Fourth Estate)
Alison Moore - The Lighthouse (Salt)
Will Self - Umbrella (Bloomsbury)
Jeet Thayil - Narcopolis (Faber and Faber)
Sam Thompson - Communion Town (Fourth Estate)


"We did not set out to reject the old guard but, after a year of sustained critical argument by a demanding panel of judges, the new has come powering through.” said Sir Peter Stothard, Editor of the Times Literary Supplement, who is chairing the judging panel this year.

The shortlist will be announced on Tuesday 11th September, and the winner of the £50,000 prize at London's Guildhall on Tuesday 16th October 2012.

The longlisted books were selected from a total of 145 titles, 11 of which were called in by the judges. Over at the Literary Saloon, M.A.Orthofer continues to campaign for the list of nominated titles to be made public. it is hard to understand why other prizes, notably The IMPAC prize, do it but the Booker will not.



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Monday, July 23, 2012

GoodRatings

A few days ago John_Self pointed out that Hawthorn and Child was the highest rated title on the list of Man Booker possibles on goodreads. This begged a question: what would the longlist look like if the decision was based on that site's reader ratings?

Among the eligible titles I am aware of, I found seventeen with average ratings of 4.5 or more. Of those, I am excluding JK Rowling's The Casual Vacancy, which has received lots of ratings from people who cannot possibly have read it yet, and three books (Black Bread White Beer by Niven Govinden, Held Up by Christopher Radmann, and Sam Thompson's Communion Town) which, at the time of writing, boast a single five-star rating. I should also point out that some contenders have not been rated by anyone yet - including Rose Tremain and WIll Self - while many others have only had a few, so things may well change over the coming months.

Here then are the thirteen books that currently have the highest average reader ratings on goodreads:

Ros Barber - The Marlowe Papers
Nicola Barker - The Yips
Ned Beauman - The Teleportation Accident
Stuart Evers - If This Is Home
Susan Fletcher - The Silver Dark Sea
Kirsty Gunn - The Big Music
Hema Macherla - Blue Eyes
James Meek - The Heart Broke In
Benjamin Myers - Pig Iron
Keith Ridgway - Hawthorn and Child
Monique Roffey - Archipelago
Alan Warner - The Deadman's Pedal
Gavin Weston - Harmattan

Now that would be an intriguing longlist - and note the complete lack of big names.

This year's judges have some fascinating choices to make. It is a shame they will have to consign so many books to the also-ran bin, but there is no excuse for them not to come up with an exciting list. (No pressure...)



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Monday, July 16, 2012

Man Booker Prize 2012: Longlist contenders

The longlist for the 2012 Man Booker Prize will be announced next week (July 25th), so it must be make-myself-look-silly-by-predicting-all-the-wrong-books time.

So far 2012 has been a good year for Millers, with Andrew Miller winning the Costa Book of the Year for Pure, and Madeline Miller winning the Orange Prize for The Song of Achilles. Well, that's it then, Alex Miller is bound to win with Autumn Laing... Oh, but just in case it's not that simple, let's take a look at some of the other contenders...

Firstly, the big historical tomes. Not my cup of tea, then again neither is tea, but millions swear by it. Will Bring Up The Bodies - Hilary Mantel's follow-up to Wolf Hall, be trumped by Merivel: A Man of His Time - Rose Tremain's sequel to Restoration (which was shortlisted for the Booker in 1989) or Ros Barber's ambitious novel in verse The Marlowe Papers? And have I jinxed John Saturnall's Feast, Lawrence Norfolk's first novel in twelve years, by tipping it as a potential winner? I would certainly expect to see at least one or two of those on the list, but four books set in 16th-17th century not-so-Merrie Englande would surely be an overdose.

Now that the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award is safely in the bag for Andy Murray, could Scotland do the double and produce a Man Booker Prize winner as well? It is eighteen years since How Late It Was, How Late won, and I would not bet against James Kelman winning the prize again eventually, but I've not heard any strong vibes in favour of Mo Said She Was Quirky as yet. Scotland has also provided us with one of most impressive debuts of the year though: The Panopticon by Jenni Fagan - and arguably, the best title: Kerry Hudson's Tony Hogan Bought Me an Ice-Cream Float Before He Stole My Ma.

But on the basis of a number of outstanding reviews, The Deadman's Pedal - which Alan Warner began writing more than twenty years ago - sounds like a strong contender. Come September I would not be surprised to hear the bookies bleating - because when they set the odds they will almost certainly overprice it. (Assuming the judges don't make me look like a right barmpot by leaving it off the list.)

Or could this be Martin Amis's year? The acid test for the judges ought to be: what would we think of Lionel Asbo if it was a debut novel by an unknown writer? I think we would probably be comparing it to Vernon God Little. Well, I would, albeit tempered by words like 'nearly'. It is a sparky piece of contemporary satire and (unlike tea) that is my cup of tea, so I would like to see it on the longlist - but then again, I would have longlisted Ben Elton's Blind Faith in 2007 so what do I know?

Every year, the focus ends up on which authors the judges have "snubbed" and this year looks like a very strong year which means that lots of big names will have to be "snubbed". (To judge for yourself just how strong the field is for this years prize there is a list of 150+ possible contenders here.)

As well as Amis, possible snubbees include Ian McEwan (Sweet Tooth), Zadie Smith (NW) and John Banville, whose latest, Ancient Light, appears to have been damned with fantastic praise - the cover carries this gushing recommendation from Sebastian Barry: "Could any book be better? Did it even need to be as tremendous as this?" - Others have been less generous (how could they not?) One reader (Archer) on the official Man Booker prize forum said: "I found the novel incredibly tedious, and surprisingly bloodless and toothless for a book that is ostensibly about erotic passion. The only thing Banville is passionate about is his thesaurus." Ouch!

There was an excellent two-part article article in the New Yorker recently by Michael Cunningham relating his experience of being a judge for the Pulitzer Prize earlier this year. He hits the nail on the head several times over. "A literary prize is, at best, " he says, "one way of drawing readers to a book that deserves more serious attention than it might have gotten without a prize."

The trouble is that prize juries can get carried away, throw out too much ballast and leave the prize looking lightweight. Like last year. And 2006, when Hermione Lee's panel omitted some, in her words: "talented and exceptional and splendid writers" explaining that "they don’t need us. They will go on regardless."

Peter Carey was one of the exceptional writers omitted that year. Yes, he has already won the prize twice, but so what? He will probably win four or five. He is one of the best writers in the world and his novels are a benchmark of quality fiction and, as such, everyone else's work should be weighed against his. So if The Chemistry of Tears isn't on the longlist, I will question the judges' agenda. Others may go further and question the judges' lineage if they fail to include Keith Ridgway on the longlist - particularly John_Self who says that "Hawthorn & Child exhaustively answers the question: What do you want from a book?" Ostensibly about two police detectives trying to track down a gangster, as Jeremy Beale says on BookOxygen, it "certainly isn’t a conventional crime novel, or indeed a conventional novel of any kind."

Hopefully, after suggestions of dumbing down in recent years, this year's jury will be more receptive to the sui generis. There are certainly plenty of unconventional books around to get readers' minds spinning. As well as Hawthorn and Child and The Marlowe Papers, there is Nell Leyshon's "Brontë-esque" novella The Colour of Milk; Richard Milward's experimental novel - Kimberly's Capital Punishment - which has six alternative endings ("Bring your own dice"); the genre-bending Jack Glass by Adam Roberts; The Teleportation Accident by Ned Beauman (the protagonist of which you can follow on Twitter @EgonLoeser); Sam Mills' literary headfuck The Quiddity of Will Self; and the Will Self, himself, whose latest, Umbrella, is, according to The Guardian a stream of consciousness novel "uninterrupted by chapters or line breaks". "Self has never been shortlisted for the Booker," they point out, "but Umbrella is such a linguistically adept, emotionally subtle and ethically complex novel that this could and should be his year."

Now that's the stuff. And if the Man Booker Prize doesn't reward experimental novels, who else will? (The new Literature Prize? Whatever happened to that? Does anyone know?) My ideal Booker longlist would have a mixture of challenging and genuinely novel novels alongside the beautifully written and the more straightforward but compelling narratives.

One such straightforward but compelling and, dare I say it, page-turning tale that I would be sad to see omitted is Hinterland by Caroline Brothers. The story of two young brothers from Afghanistan trying to make their way across Europe to the UK - illegally, of course - it flows beautifully, and believably, to its inevitably heartrending end. Barbara Trapido quite rightly describes it as "a story that all of us should read." Jackie Bailey makes a similar claim for The Street Sweeper by Elliot Perlman: "The world would be a better place if everyone read this book and understood its important message", she says.

I am asking GoodReads members to vote for their favourite eligible titles, and some of the highest rated books so far are: Absolution by Patrick Flanery, Rhumba by Elaine Proctor, The Coward's Tale by Vanessa Gebbie, The Light Between Oceans by ML Stedman and The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce (which is likely to be one of the most talked about books of the year that doesn't have either of the words "shades" or "vacancy" in the title). Plus another wonderful novel featuring a pair of brothers: Stephen May's Life! Death! Prizes! Feel free to add your vote here:

www.goodreads.com/list/show/16700.Man_Booker_Prize_Eligible_2012 

Lastly, two authors who, amazingly, have never even been longlisted for the Booker are Sebastian Faulks (A Possible Life is out in September) and Adam Thorpe. Every year someone says pooh to the judges if they don't include one particular book on the shortlist, and this year it is Kate Saunders in The Times, who says that Thorpe's latest, Flight, is "a breakneck, knuckle-whitening thriller, written with absolute brilliance - pooh to the Booker judges if this is not on the shortlist."

One thing is clear then, you should not agree to judge the Man Booker prize if you don't like people saying pooh to you.


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