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Past Winners & Finalists (1969 - 2003)
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Past Man Booker Prize Winners
& Finalists (1979)
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1979 |
| Book
Cover |
Book
Details |
Synopsis
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TBS
Rank |
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1979
Winner |
Offshore
by Penelope Fitzgerald
Publisher: Collins
ISBN: 0395478049
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On
the Battersea Reach of the Thames , a mixed bag of the slightly
disreputable, the temporarily lost, and the patently eccentric live
on houseboats, rising and falling with the great river's tides.
Belonging to neither land nor sea, they belong to one another in
a motley yet kindly society. There is Maurice, by occupation a male
prostitute, by nature a friend to all. And Richard, a buttoned-up
ex=navy man, whose boat, much like its owner, dominates the Reach.
Then there is Nenna, a faithful, loving, but abandoned wife, the
diffident mother of two young girls running wild in the waterfront
streets.
It is Nenna's domestic predicament that,
as it deepens, draws the relations among this scrabby community together
into ever more complex and comic patterns. The result is one of Penelope
Fitzgerald's greatest triumphs, a novel the Booker judges deemed “flawless.”
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1 |
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Confederates
by Thomas Keneally
Publisher: Collins
ISBN:
0060914467
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Thomas
Keneally's epic of the Civil War takes us into the lives of four
remarkable characters in the embattled Virginia summer of 1862;
a southern hospital matron who is also a Union spy, a British war
journalist with access to both sides and two foot soldiers under
Stonewall Jackson. |
4 |
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A
Bend in the River
by V.S. Naipaul Publisher:
Deutsch
ISBN: 0679722025
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In
the "brilliant novel" ( The New York Times )
V.S. Naipaul takes us deeply into the life of one man—an Indian
who, uprooted by the bloody tides of Third World history, has come
to live in an isolated town at the bend of a great river in a newly
independent African nation. Naipaul gives us the most convincing
and disturbing vision yet of what happens in a place caught between
the dangerously alluring modern world and its own tenacious past
and traditions. |
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Joseph
by Julian Rathbone Publisher:
Michael Joseph
ISBN:
0349112274 |
Joseph
Bosham, self-styled third Viscount of Bosham, with a half-English
Catholic priest for a father and an Italian brothel-keeper in place
of a mother, educated in mathematics, music and philosophy, but
with a gift for narrative and a natural bent for depravity, was
born into the turbulent Europe of 1790 and settled in Spain, where
gypsies, devil-worshippers and the remnants of the Inquisition fought
for space with the great armies of Wellington and Napoleon. Seduced
by the hectic glamour of battle at the age of eleven and tossed
in its wake for the next fifteen years, little Jose survives as
a courier, pimp, linguist, mercenary and mascot to tell his poignant,
comic, richly entertaining and tantalizingly unreliable tale.
Shortlisted for the Booker Prize in
1979 and now available for the first time in paperback, Julian Rathbone's
re-invention of the picaresque is a riotous, complex and deliciously
subversive masterpiece. |
2 |
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Praxis
by Fay Weldon Publisher:
Hodder & Stoughton
ISBN: 0340595809
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Raised
by a mad mother and a half-mad sister, abandoned by her father,
Praxis Duveen is a master of the art of survival. Her life, indeed,
has been full: two marriages, unsuccessful; a brief but profitable
career as a prostitute; a little dabbling in incest; a mercy killing;
and an inadvertent reign as both apostle and victim of the women's
movement.
Buffeted and battered by life, Praxis
has survived with energy and humor intact. Her struggles with men
and women, with mother and marriages, and most particularly, with
herself, become, in Weldon's deft hands, a witty and trenchant commentary
on what women want—and what they can actually get. |
3 |
| Judges |
Lord Asa Briggs, Benny
Green, Michael Ratcliffe, Hilary Spurling, Paul Theroux |
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