The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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The Pear Field
International Booker Prize
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2021 Booker International longlist: The Pear Field
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Mar 30, 2021 01:22AM


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Although this was actually my least favourite of their three books - I much preferred both Ankomst and Nordic Fauna.


There must be an art to getting books on the Booker. Fitzcarraldo have it and when it was the IFFP Peirene made an almost annual appearance.

But it was the only Peirene book on your shadow jury predictions/ wish list I think so someone liked it.
Perhaps topical as well given the Everyone’s Invited campaign in the UK. Not quite the same thing but still relevant.




I know it’s not an original observation (given both the publishers focus on film-like books and the author’s day job) but currently this reads a bit too much for me like an outline pitch for a tv mini series with only occasional novel-like pieces (for example the description of the smells of the institution)

But then on a list that is all about stretching the boundaries of the novel, this is another way to do it.

But I am going to make a prediction - that this will make the actual shortlist (I felt this was the book the two judges were most effusive over on the Booker podcast).


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I do think the links to "Summer Brother" and various of the (best) stories in "The Dangers of Smoking in Bed" plus what seemed to me at least the enthusiasm of the judges on the podcast mean this might be a dark horse for the shortlist.

Wouldn't surprise me...



Our new books are very overpriced. We pay about 19 pounds for a trade paperback or about US$23. Books from US publishers are much cheaper here than UK ones.
Publishers here are pretty much unable to sell books overseas because the postage is now the same amount as the book itself.


Our new books are very overpriced. We pay about 19 pounds for a trade paperback or about US..."
Very similar here in Aus.




I'm always a little concerned as well with those that do offer reasonable/free postage overseas as I wonder if they actually make any profit on the books.

I wish these small presses had publishers could work out deals for publishing and shipping with bigger publishers, but they probably fear a slippery slope into loss of independence.

It's not bad but not great either, usually a 10 GBP book can be hiked up 18 euro. There are exceptions. The Galley Beggar Subscription is super affordable, the Influx one I have is worth it.
But then with Jacaranda, the shipping is more than the book, Fitzcarraldo can be a bit steep (but as of June I'm going to take the plunge and go for the 11 book subscription - including the white books)
Bluemoose have been discussing a subscription service for the past two years, when that happens I'll be there regardless of any cost.


Wendy said "I wish these small presses had publishers could work out deals for publishing and shipping with bigger publishers, but they probably fear a slippery slope into loss of independence."
I'm not quite sure how the big presses manage other than shipping on bulk either via Amazon, or publishing and sales via their local arms. Eg on the Penguin UK website you can't order books for delivery outside of UK at all - it's either via a local PRH entity who also publish it, or Amazon.
In the UK a lot of indies distribute via Inpress (https://inpressbooks.co.uk/pages/our-...). And in the US there is Consortium (https://www.cbsd.com/publishers/our-p...)
Some leading UK presses have signed up to Consortium notably Charco, Fitzcarraldo, And Other Stories - although sadly I think no US presses have signed up to Inpress.
But "distribution" here doesn't mean you can buy from the Consortium website. I think it mainly means the books can be purchased more easily by physical bookshops and local online offerings (Barnes and Nobel). Not sure if they handle local purchases via the publisher website as well.
And that only addresses a trans-Atlantic issue not the need a tunnel through centre of earth one.


It's not the same though - this year, I read most of the IB longlist electronically and, although I am VERY grateful, I did miss the feel of a book.


I just have a piece of paper handy whenever I read - no need to deface the actual book ;)


To me quotes of key passages are key to a review - I want to remember the author's words at least as much as my views on them

To me quotes of key passages are key to a review - I want to remember the author's words at least as much as my views on them"
Oh I had not thought of that - do you really use that?
And agree re quotes - they also to me convey to someone who has not read the book what the writing style is like …….. but you do veer on the fringes of copyright infringement with some reviews!!

So do I on paper books (but not if I can get a Kindle version)

(although for those who don't like breaking spines of books - it works better if you do as the book lays flatter)

The one time this was raised was by the publisher who I seem to be their no 1 fan and certainly no 1 subscriber - Les Fugitives. Who did point out that if you added my review to the extracts they'd published in certain magazines, and the extracts the US publisher released, there was little original left to read.
That said The Outsider is entirely available for free on Amazon kindle preview yet the royalties continue to roll in. I made another 20 pence last month.
Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer wrote: "Oh I had not thought of that - do you really use that?"
Of course - seriously doesn't everyone. You actually type out something that someone else has already typed in machine readable format???

Well there is another marvellous technical innovation that perhaps people are also unaware of called Google and to I just type 'image to text' in there and pick the first one.
This one works quite well https://www.onlineocr.net/
Finding one that recognises Korean is harder and I seem to have to edit more.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Outsider (other topics)The Living Sea of Waking Dreams (other topics)
The Pear Field (other topics)