Tournament of Books discussion
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2016 Tournament of Books
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2016 Final 16, Judges, & Brackets

I will probably be off in the 'salt mines' when the final list drops (unless it is posted in the next hour), so I won't tune in to comment again until this afternoon. I will be check in on my breaks though.
Thanks for being 'at the ready', Jennifer!


happy? disappointed? what do you think?


I think it looks like a great list of books. I can't wait to hear what people have to say about The Sympathizer, Fates & Furies, and my beloved The Tsar of Love and Techno.



I've only read 3 from the list but MANY that I wanted to read. Good times.

As mentioned yesterday, wanted to get Sellout, Turner House, Tsar, and Spool off my TBR pile... and curious about many others, notably Oreo and Teeth, thanks to this forum!
Would like to get to (have the excuse for) the Irving since his books really stoked my love of reading in my younger years.




I agree! I was fairly excited about them as well.



I listened to Our Souls at Night and A Spool of Blue Thread on audio. Both were well narrated. Of the two, I'd give the edge to Souls but it's a slim volume and you might not want to use a credit for such a short listen.



right?? could be a interesting perspective brought in on his judgment.

it's pretty hilarious. there are very few shows my husband and i both agree on -- this is one we watch together. though a couple of the voices can be grating at the wrong volume, the humour entertains me a lot.

right?? could be a interesting perspective brought in on his judgment."
I hope he gets to review A Little Life....get the shrink take on it....lol.

I listened to Fates and Furies. it worked for me, mostly because i would never have gone past page 50 in the book edition. the audiobook made it acceptable to me. i also listened to Story of My Teeth, but that in retrospect seems a mistake. if you want to save yourself credits you can use my audible account. happy to share the password with you.


Ban En Banlieue is the only book my library does not carry. Otherwise, the library will provide all unread TOB books.
Thanks to Jennifer for the original post.



I listened to Fates and Furies. it worked for me, mostly because i would never have gone past page 50 i..."
Ah! Too kind of you. I am ok though. I just spent credits on The Whites, Blue Thread and Fates and Furies so I'll be good for awhile yet. I do recommend A Little Life in audio form. It's long, but it had me actually crying in the car on the way to work so it really worked for me.


I'm with you, Beth! Last year was the first year I managed to complete the list but I plan to again this year. I've only read 4 of the books (and I'm including Oreo which I'm only halfway through) but one of them is A Little Life so at least there are no doorstops ahead of me.

Kate wrote: "So happy the list has been posted. I've read A Little Life and Fates and Furies and thought both were excellent. I'm currently reading The Tsar of Love and Techno but unlike many of the others post..."

Most read (most number of ratings):
1) A Spool of Blue Thread
2) Fates and Furies
3) A Little Life
Least read:
1) Ban En Banlieue
2) The New World
3) Bats of the Republic
Will be interesting to see the ratings move around this year as more and more people read these.


Not sure where to start. Maybe with The New World.


but The Tsar of Love and Techno is a short story collection so they've got one in there. they usually have one don't they? i've only been following more seriously for the past 3 or 4-ish years.

No real surprises on the list for me. I do have about a half a dozen books to return to the library unread now though.

I listened to The Spool of Blue Thread and liked the audio production. I may seek out some of these from the library on audio to ensure I have more read when the tournament begins.


I've read 12. I liked a lot of them. If I think of this list as a whole, it feels like it values innovation above all else. It's as though those who picked the short list are deliberately rejecting the idea of "literary quality" being something that has any kind of meaningful definition, and are trying to pack in as many kinds of writing as possible. To find room for the most innovation possible they left out the NBA winner and put Tyler and Irving on the front porch instead of inviting them to the party.
Usually I go for innovation as a reader. My highest praise is "I've never read anything like this before." But I was kind of hoping for some of the exquisite reads on the long list that I haven't yet gotten to, rather than more pyrotechnics. This list is a bit too hipster for me.

care to say what, poingu?

I started Story of My Teeth at lunch and feel similarly a bit mystified by it. I guess I'd better get used to that feeling for the next couple of months.


not really!
It could be I'm just suffering from too much innovation altogether, jo. Outside of Tyler and possibly Irving (I haven't read it), the only novel on the list that strikes me as a Novel, in that old-fashioned, baggy monster sort of way, is The Turner House.
But even the long list already felt tilted in this way, toward the new.
Just my mood I guess. Last night I picked up and began to read a 534-page Polish intergenerational saga, Stone Upon Stone. I've read so many short, sharp, innovative novels in this last year that I'm ready for a change.
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Heart (other topics)The Sellout (other topics)
The Sympathizer (other topics)
The Turner House (other topics)
The Sympathizer (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Viet Thanh Nguyen (other topics)Daniel Wallace (other topics)
Jeff VanderMeer (other topics)
Celeste Ng (other topics)
Daniel Wallace (other topics)
More...
http://www.themorningnews.org/article...
Final 15
• The New World
• The Sellout
• Bats of the Republic: An Illuminated Novel
• The Turner House
• Fates and Furies
• Our Souls at Night
• Ban En Banlieue
• The Story of My Teeth
• The Tsar of Love and Techno
• The Sympathizer
• The Whites
• Oreo
• The Book of Aron
• The Invaders
• A Little Life
TOB Play-in Round
• Avenue of Mysteries
• A Spool of Blue Thread
The Judges
• Blake Bailey is the author of biographies of John Cheever, Richard Yates, and Charles Jackson, and he is working on the authorized biography of Philip Roth. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Francis Parkman Prize, and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. His most recent book, The Splendid Things We Planned: A Family Portrait, was a finalist for the National Books Critics Circle Award.
• Maria Bustillos is a journalist and critic based in Los Angeles. She has written on culture, politics, technology, and business for the New Yorker, Harper’s, the New York Times, The Awl, the Guardian, Bloomberg, etc. Her first published fiction appeared in the Paris Review earlier this year.
• Jaime Green’s essays have appeared in The Awl, The Millions, American Theatre online, and elsewhere. She also hosts and produces The Catapult, a podcast of new writing read aloud.
• Danielle Henderson is a new TV writer and old freelancer. She lives in the “not Brooklyn” part of New York City.
• Brad Listi is the author of the novel Attention. Deficit. Disorder.: A Novel and the founding editor of The Nervous Breakdown, an online culture magazine and literary community. He is also the host of Otherppl with Brad Listi, a weekly podcast featuring interviews with today’s leading writers. He lives in Los Angeles.
• Liz Lopatto is the science editor at The Verge. Before that, she worked at Bloomberg News and before that, founded the Kenyon Review’s blog. Her interests include cats and space explosions.
• Syreeta McFadden is a Brooklyn-based writer, photographer, and adjunct professor of English. Her work has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, the Guardian, BuzzFeed, NPR, The Nation and Storyscape Journal. She is the managing editor of the online literary magazine Union Station and a co-curator of the group Poets in Unexpected Places. She is currently working on collections of short stories and essays.
• Lizzie Molyneux is a writer for the Emmy-winning animated Fox show, Bob’s Burgers, with her writing partner/sister Wendy. Her dog thinks she's pretty great.
• Wendy Molyneux, along with her sister Lizzie Molyneux, writes for the TV show Bob’s Burgers, for which she also voices the massively unpopular character Jen the Babysitter. She is also a frequent contributor to McSweeney’s Internet Tendency and other humor sites, and has had several pieces included in the Best American Nonrequired Reading anthology series over the years.
• Celeste Ng is the author of the New York Times bestselling novel Everything I Never Told You. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, One Story, Gulf Coast, The Millions, and elsewhere, and has been awarded the Pushcart Prize. She earned an MFA from the University of Michigan and lives in Cambridge, Mass.
• Kit Rachlis is a senior editor at California Sunday Magazine. He was editor-in-chief of the American Prospect, Los Angeles Magazine, and the LA Weekly, and executive editor of The Village Voice.
• Doree Shafrir is a culture writer at BuzzFeed and the author of the forthcoming novel Startup (Little, Brown). She lives in Los Angeles.
• Choire Sicha is a co-founder of The Awl, BookForum columnist, former Gawker editor, longtime TMN writer, and author of a book of nonfiction.
• TMN 2016 Reader Judge John Taylor is a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he works on the inpatient consultation service in the emergency department, serves as assistant training director for the MGH/McLean residency, and is a project manager in behavioral health integration. He is also an instructor at Harvard Medical School. He lives in Cambridge, Mass.
• Miriam Tuliao works for BookOps, the shared technical services organization of the Brooklyn Public Library and New York Public Library. She is a member of the Asian Pacific American Librarians Association and American Library Association.
• Jeff VanderMeer’s most recent fiction is the New York Times bestselling Area X: The Southern Reach Trilogy (Annihilation, Authority, and Acceptance), which won the Nebula Award and Shirley Jackson Award, and made Entertainment Weekly’s list of the top 10 books of the year. Paramount Pictures/Scott Rudin Productions acquired the movie rights with Alex Garland set to direct. VanderMeer’s nonfiction has appeared in the New York Times, the Guardian, the Washington Post, The Atlantic’s website, and the LA Times.
• Daniel Wallace is the author of five novels. He directs the Creative Writing Program at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
• Kelvin Yu is a writer currently working on the Fox animated series Bob’s Burgers. A Los Angeles native, Yu studied theater and communications at UCLA. He is also an actor whose credits include Milk, Star Trek, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, and, most recently, Master of None.
• Jess Zimmerman is a writer and editor who’s appeared in Hazlitt, the New Republic, the Guardian, The Hairpin, and others. The Toast once said she was “on fire” but it turned out she was fine. She lives in Brooklyn with all the other writers, and when not working spends most of her time aging, feeling terrible about aging, or frequently both.
Brackets
Visit the TOB site for the brackets, and a PDF printable version: http://www.themorningnews.org/article...
Here is the schedule of this year’s match-ups:
March 7
2015 ToB Introduction
by Kevin Guilfoile & John Warner
Play-in Match
March 8
Avenue of Mysteries v. A Spool of Blue Thread
Judged by Lizzie Molyneux, Wendy Molyneux, and Kelvin Yu
Opening Round
March 9
Fates and Furies v. Bats of the Republic
Judged by Maria Bustillos
March 10
The Sympathizer v. Oreo
Judged by Brad Listi
March 11
The Turner House v. Ban en Banlieue
Judged by Miriam Tuliao
March 14
Our Souls at Night v. The Whites
Judged by Syreeta McFadden
March 15
A Little Life v. The New World
Judged by Choire Sicha
March 16
The Book of Aron v. The Tsar of Love and Techno
Judged by Doree Shafrir
March 17
Play-in Winner v. The Story of My Teeth
Judged by Daniel Wallace
March 18
The Sellout v. The Invaders
Judged by Liz Lopatto
Quarterfinals
March 21
TBD v. TBD
Judged by Kit Rachlis
March 22
TBD v. TBD
Judged by Jess Zimmerman
March 23
TBD v. TBD
Judged by John Taylor
March 24
TBD v. TBD
Judged by Danielle Henderson
Semifinals
March 25
TBD v. TBD
Judged by Jaime Green
March 28
TBD v. TBD
Judged by Jeff VanderMeer
Zombie Round
March 29
Zombie Pick No. 1 v. TBD
Judged by Blake Bailey
March 30
Zombie Pick No. 2 v. TBD
Judged by Celeste Ng
Championship
March 31
TBD v. TBD
All Judges
**********
And make sure you cast your Zombie vote, embedded in the announcement: http://www.themorningnews.org/article...