The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
Booker Prize for Fiction
>
2020 Booker Longlist Discussion

To summarise above - 9 US based authors (one Irish, one Scottish, one Ethiopian), 3 in UK and 1 Zimbabwe. No one from Canada or ANZ.

So despite all those Irish hopes we only get the American-based one. Apeirogon and TMATL fully deserve their places - I look forward to finding out more about the rest.

Burnt Sugar - 30 July (so this week)
Shuggie Bain - 6 August
Real Life - 27 August
Who They Was - 3 September
The New Wilderness - 3 September
I'll withhold judgment since I haven't read a single one, but my initial thought is man the Booker is really digging American fiction. My disapproval of expanding the pool to include U.S. writers a few years ago do not need to be repeated here.
I'm also sad Hamlet didn't make it, and surprised. My initial reaction in the Women's Prize thread was mixed, but I've come around on that book. It's one of my favorites.
Still, as I said above, I haven't read a single one of these, or even looked into most of them, so I'm heartened that I'll have some homework to do.
I'm also sad Hamlet didn't make it, and surprised. My initial reaction in the Women's Prize thread was mixed, but I've come around on that book. It's one of my favorites.
Still, as I said above, I haven't read a single one of these, or even looked into most of them, so I'm heartened that I'll have some homework to do.


However 3 of the books I read this year and immediately thought "this should win the Booker" (I would maybe add "Hamnet" and "That Reminds Me" although I think they may better suit Women's Prize and Goldsmith) - Apeirogon, Shuggie Bain, The Mirror and The Light are on there.
And lots of other stuff to discover.
Does anyone know if this is the most women authors to appear on a Booker longlist? The New York Times says that nine are women.


Penguin Random House - 2
Hachette - 3
Harper Collins - 2
Bloomsbury - 2
Faber Alliance - 4 (Faber, Canongate, Oneworld, Daunt Books)
(*) that's a real low - they run 4-7 and an average of 5 for the last 7 years



I looked at the list on various sites and was surprised how many of them seem to be marketed as women's fiction as distinct from fiction by women.


That's just how it goes for women who write books in large part.
It occurs to me that I feel like several of these titles lately:
Tsitsi Dangarembga's This Mournable Body & Baltimore's own Anne Tyler: Redhead by the side of the road.

I'm halfway through Hamnet and also disappointed that it didn't make the list.

Yes (and was on Facebook) I was hoping they would honour that and it seems they have.

Now if you delete your post asking me to delete my post I will delete this one!
You also need an asterix by PRH in your post





Off to bed...

I've two of these signed, per my collecting parameters, and I honestly didn't think they would be more than "books I want", so this is kind of nice.



I read the two big ones.
I'm glad Anne Tyler is there, or I probably wouldn't have read her new one..
I am also reading
This Mournable Body
Shadow King
Shuggie Bain
Real Life
How Much of these Hills is Gold
I probably won't get to the others unless they shortlist or get great reviews here.
I do intend to keep reading many books that were discussed here as possibles, since I have most of them and planned on reading them anyway.
No Ali Smith leaves me disappointed but see you all in the Ali Smith topic when Summer releases.

Need to decide if I have the wherewithal to read the first two books in the trilogy leading up to This Mournable Body. Has anyone read them already? Is it needed to appreciate the third one?
I totally understand the frustration with how U.S. heavy the list is. But selfishly it's nice how few I have to worry about tracking down or ordering as imports. Also, I will say that I feel the prize has gained a lot of interest here since they made the change...
Yay, very excited, happy reading everyone!

That's just how it goes ..."
Ella made me smile

Indeed some reviews seem to have missed the 2nd part even exists (the first got some strong publicity a few years back as it featured on the BBCs 100 Books That Shaped Our World).

LOL. Thanks for a good chuckle, Ella. :-)

:)
How does it compare to other years?

As a reminder
- In the 2017 the longlist featured: 8 of the top 10, 11 of the top 20, only the two "unknown" debuts - Elmet and History of Wolves were not in the top 20 and even History of Wolves was 26th).
- By contrast the 2018 left field longlist featured: 3 of the top 20, 7 of the top 40 I think, and a whole host of books not even in the listed 16
- 2019 was back to 2017. The longlist featured 8 of the top 20, 12 of the top 30, (only The Wall at 56 was not in the top 30)
This year
2 of the top 10 (Mantel and McCann), 3 of the top 20 (Zhang), 7 of top 50 (Stuart, Mengiste, Reid, Tyler) and 6 not listed in the 160 books (with Dangarembga In the top 80).


I'm surprised by the list but thrilled to see Real Life. I read it early in the year and still think about it. Probably because the list is US-heavy I'm missing the thrill of discovery I usually get from the list. But I'm interested in reading Burnt Sugar and Love and Other Thought Experiments.

I'm surprised by the list but thrilled to see Real Life. I read it early in the year and still think about it. Proba..."
Welcome Margie! I'm glad you decided to de-lurk.
The longlist is an exciting time, even though I swore off trying to read it this year, I can't help but be excited, so I'm glad to see you here and hope you'll stick around!

I'm surprised by the list but thrilled to see Real Life. I read it early in the year and still think ..."
Thanks, Ella!

Perhaps the thing I find most surprising is how heavily weighted this list is towards American authors. This is both a blessing and a curse.
The blessing: 8 of the 13 titles are already available in Canada and 2 others have release dates in August and September - which means only 3 are entirely unavailable in Canada as of yet. This is fantastic compared to last year when the majority of titles had Canadian release dates set in October or beyond.
The curse: I love the Booker because it usually represents a wide spread of literature from across the globe. I'm afraid I already read too much "American Literature" and look to the Booker to balance my reading diet.
Glad to see a few new names popping up in the discussion! Welcome aboard!



We ugly Americans: we have to dominate everywhere we’re invited. Sorry.
I’m off to read up on all the titles I hadn’t heard of before this list.

After finishing How Much of these Hills is Gold next for me is likely Shadow King then depends on order I can track them down and get my hands on them. Have a few on reserve at library and I'm high on the list but a good few of them are still 'on order'.

By memory only, I would say the page total is less than usual. What is definitely different is that there is only one brick, the Mantel, and only one book under 200 pages, the Tyler.
General comment-
And I will now raise my pet peeve. As someone who for a very long time has divided the year between Mexico and the US I find it very jarring when people call the US "America." America is two continents, not one country.

By memory only, I would say the page total is less than usual. What is definitely different is that there is only one brick, the Mantel, and only one book under 200 pages, the Tyler.
General ..."
Re your pet peeve. In Trivial Pursuit if there's a US-centric question, you HAVE to say The U.S. or United States - it's considered (and rightly so) incorrect to say America as an answer.
Books mentioned in this topic
How Much of These Hills Is Gold (other topics)Love and Other Thought Experiments (other topics)
Who They Was (other topics)
Who They Was (other topics)
Actress (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Kiley Reid (other topics)Diane Cook (other topics)
Tsitsi Dangarembga (other topics)
Avni Doshi (other topics)
Gabriel Krauze (other topics)
More...
Please remember the Booker Folder Rules. If you have not read them, please do so here.
Please see the 2020 Booker Longlist Dynamic Rankings to have a say in the collective opinion of the group!