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Past Winners & Finalists (1969 - 2003)
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Past Man Booker Prize Winners
& Finalists (1981)
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1981 |
| Book
Cover |
Book
Details |
Synopsis
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TBS
Rank |
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1981
Winner
Midnight's
Children also won the prestigious Booker of
Bookers |
Midnight's
Children
by Salman Rushdie
Publisher: Cape
ISBN: 0140132708
|
Saleem
Sinai was born at midnight , the midnight of
India's independence, and finds himself mysteriously "handcuffed
to history" by the coincidence. He is one of 1,001 children
born at the midnight hour, each of them endowed with an extraordinary
talent — and whose privilege and curse it is to be both master and
victims of their times. Through Saleem's gifts — inner voices and
a wildly sensitive sense of smell — we are drawn into a fascinating
family saga set against the vast, colourful background of the India
of this century. |
1 |
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Good
Behaviour
by Molly Keane
Publisher: Deutsch
ISBN:
1860498345
|
Behind
the gates of Temple Alice the aristocratic Anglo-Irish St. Charles
family sinks into a state of decaying grace. To Aroon St. Charles,
large and unlovely daughter of the house, the fierce forces of sex,
money, jealousy and love seem locked out by the ritual patterns
of good behaviour. But crumbling codes of conduct cannot hope to
save the members of the St. Charles family from their own unruly
and inadmissible desires.
This elegant and elusive novel coming
after years of silence establishes Molly Keane as the natural successor
to Jean Rhys. |
2 |
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The
Sirian Experiments
by Doris Lessing Publisher:
Cape
ISBN: 0394512316
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Ambien
II is one of The Five, the highest level of the Sirian Colonial
Service, who have been the hidden rulers of Sirius for many thousands
of years. She is a competent, skilled administrator and manipulator
of populations and events—in essence a bureaucrat, but according
to the demands of the Sirian Empire, for she is always and everywhere
first of all a Sirian official, though she does try to temper severity
with compassion and believes herself to be something of a liberal.
The
Sirian Empire thinks very well of itself, imagines itself the crown
of the Galaxy, despises the Canopean Empire, seeing it as a rival.
In reality Canopus is in advance of Sirius in every way and is in
fact ruler of the Galaxy. Canopus , having defeated Sirius in war,
behaved magnanimously, and thereafter has been trying to lift Sirius
to its own level, but in subtle and long-term ways. Ambien II is
the individual whom Canopus uses to introduce higher and nobler
ideas to the Sirian Empire. She has no inkling of this—not for long
ages. But slowly she comes to see how much there is to learn from
Canopus.
This book is an account, from the point
of view of Ambien II, of her growth into an understanding of the comparative
barbarity of Sirius, of her own barbarousness and crudity—the beginnings
of her comprehension of how great and marvelous a creation the Canopean
Empire is. She is writing an account of the relations of Canopus and
Sirius that contradicts that of the official historians, and this
act is part of a power struggle that is convulsing the Sirian Empire
and will transform it. The Sirian Experiments is the third
book in Doris Lessing's sequence Canopus in Argos: Archives ,
which she began in Shikasta and continued in The Marriages
Between Zones Three, Four, and Five . But her space age saga
is in no sense merely a record of celestial events but more a form
in which we may dare to face the consequences of our own actions and
the destiny to which we are being drawn. |
3 |
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The
Comfort of Strangers
by Ian McEwan Publisher:
Cape
ISBN:
0679749845 |
As
their holiday unfolds, Colin and Maria are locked into their own
intimacy. They groom themselves meticulously, as though someone
is waiting for them who cares deeply about how they appear. When
they meet a man with a disturbing story to tell, they become drawn
into a fantasy of violence and obsession. |
7 |
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Rhine
Journey
by Anne Schlee Publisher:
Macmillan
ISBN: 0140062157
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On
the surface, she was the unmarried Victorian aunt, whose sparse
unfulfilled life echoed the expectations of those she drudged for.
But, happily boating down the Rhine
with her brother and his wife, the sight of a fellow traveler, Edward
Newman, releases the hissing floodwaters of her subconscious. Dark
and dangerous, they sweep Charlotte onward towards the watershed of
her life. |
4 |
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Loitering
with Intent
by Muriel Spark Publisher:
Bodley Head
ISBN: 1135252513
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A
new novel by Muriel Spark is always cause for celebration, and in
Loitering With Intent , she has given us perhaps the richest,
most intriguing novel of her remarkable career.
“How wonderful it feels to be an artist
and a woman in the twentieth century.” The year is 1949, the place
London , the speaker Fleur Talbot, an aspiring young writer on “the
grubby edge of the literary world.” Loitering With Intent is
her memoir of that time in her life when “I went on my way rejoicing.”
That way, as in any novel by Muriel Spark, is full of unexpected plot
twists, wonderfully contradictory characters, and dialog of matchless
wit. When Fleur becomes secretary to the Autobiographical Association,
a motley collection of egoists who are composing their memoirs “in
advance” (to avoid lapses in memory), she uncovers material that would
delight any budding novelist. From the pompous Sir Quentin Oliver,
who may or may not be running an elaborate con game, to his protective
housekeeper Beryl Tims and his hilarious mother, Lady Edwina (who
becomes incontinent to suit her convenience), to the defrocked Father
Delaney, and a host of others, Fleur can find the makings of several
novels. What is perplexing, however, is that they seem to act out
scenes she has already written. Loitering With Intent is
a great comic novel about the serious matters of autobiography and
the nature of the artist's method. “I was aware of a demon inside
me that rejoiced in seeing people as they were,” Fleur says, as she
loiters with the intent to create. Anyone who reads Muriel Spark's
novel will rejoice that her own demon of observation is more accurate,
funnier, and wiser than ever before. Loitering With Intent
is a novel only Muriel Spark could have written, but that everyone
can read with the deep pleasure a true artist provides. |
5 |
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The
White Hotel
by D.M. Thomas
Publisher: Gollancz
ISBN: 0140231730
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By turns a dream of
electrifying eroticism recounted by a young woman to her analyst,
Sigmund Freud, and a horrifying yet calmly unsensational narrative
of the Holocaust, this PEN Silver Pen winner is now recognized as
a modern classic that reconciles the nightmarish with the transcendent.
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6 |
| Judges |
Professor Malcolm Bradbury,
Brian Aldiss, Joan Bakewell, Samuel Hynes, Hermione Lee |
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