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Past Winners & Finalists (1969 - 2003)
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Past Man Booker Prize Winners
& Finalists (1984)
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1984 |
| Book
Cover |
Book
Details |
Synopsis
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TBS
Rank |
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1984
Winner |
Hotel
du Lac
by Anita Brookner
Publisher: Cape
ISBN: 0679759328
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In
the novel that won her the Booker Prize and established her international
reputation, Anita Brookner finds a new vocabulary for framing the
eternal question “Why love?” It tells the story of Edith Hope, who
writes romance novels under a pseudonym. When her life begins to
resemble the plots of her own novels, however Edith flees to Switzerland
, where the quiet luxury of the Hotel du Lac promises to restore
her to her senses.
But instead of peace and rest, Edith
finds herself sequestered at the Hotel with an assortment of love's
casualties and exiles. She also attracts the attention of a worldly
man determined to release her unusual capacity for mischief and pleasure.
Beautifully observed, witheringly funny, Hotel du Lac is
Brookner at her most stylish and potently subversive. |
1 |
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Empire
of the Sun
by J.G. Ballard
Publisher: Gollancz
ISBN:
0006547001
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Wars
came early to Shanghai , overtaking each other like the tides that
raced up the Yangtze…so begins J.G. Ballard's powerful and moving
new novel. Japan invaded China in 1937, and by late 1941 the European
inhabitants of Shanghai 's International Settlement had become almost
accustomed to life in their fragile island of neutrality, witnessing
the brutal reality of Japanese occupation from the safety of their
palatial homes and American limousines. For eleven-year-old Jim,
born and raised in Shanghai , this was the real war. Events in Europe
, glimpsed on flickering newsreels, were as exotic and unreal as
the Hollywood epics they preceded.
Then
came the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor , followed by the sinking
of the British and American warships anchored in the Yangtze. Separated
from his parents in the ensuing violence and confusion, Jim spent
the following weeks living alone among the grand deserted houses
of the British and French Concessions, until he was finally taken
into custody and sent to Lunghua internment camp, his home for the
next hour years. Here in a world where extreme malnutrition was
the norm, and violence and death every day facts of existence, Jim
found a kind of peace and security. The British inmates were generally
selfish and unfriendly, though the Americans kept Jim occupied with
errands, and fed his insatiable curiosity with tattered copies of
the Reader's Digest. But the people he admired most were the Japanese
guards: the protectors who kept the camp's inmates secure from the
war and chaos beyond the perimeter fence. Yet the greatest dangers
of all were to come in the summer of 1945 with the dropping of the
atomic bombs and the surrender of the Japanese armies…
Based on events J.G. Ballard witnessed
while interred in Shanghai during World War II, Empire of the
Sun is an extraordinary and original addition to the modern
literature of war, a novel worthy to stand in the company of All
Quiet on the Western Front and The Naked and the Dead .
The horrors and privations of the Japanese internment camps, as seen
through the eyes of a child to whom they are part of normal life,
and presented unflinchingly; yet the novel is written in prose which
is often lyrical and even beautiful. Empire of the Sun is
both a radical departure from J.G. Ballard's previous fiction and
the triumphant crowning achievement of his career to date.
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2 |
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Flaubert's
Parrot
by J.L. Carr
Publisher: Cape
ISBN: 0747513473
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A
kind of detective story, relating a cranky amateur scholar's search
for the truth about Gustave Flaubert, and the obsession of this
detective whose life seems to oddly mirror those of Flaubert's characters.
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4 |
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In
Custody
by Anita Desai
Publisher: Heinemann
ISBN:
0099428490 |
Asked
to interview India 's greatest poet, Nur, Deven sees a way to escape
the miseries of life as a small-town scholar. But the old man he
finds deep in the bazaars of Old Delhi bears no resemblance to the
idol of his youth. Deven is fooled, bullied and cheated, and drawn
into a new captivity. |
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According
to Mark
by Penelope Lively
Publisher: Heinemann
ISBN: 0060971991
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When
Mark Lamming, a well-established biographer, leaves London for Dorset
one May morning to meet the granddaughter of his new subject, he
has no suspicion that his fulfilling and well-ordered life is about
to be turned upside down. Short-listed for the 1984 Booker Prize,
According to Mark is many pleasures in one subtly crafted
entertainment: the story of a middle-aged man's summer obsession
with a young woman, a literary detective story that moves through
England and France , and a fascinating inside view of the biographer's
exacting art. |
5 |
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Small
World
by David Lodge
Publisher: Secker & Warburg
ISBN: 0140244867
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It's
academic conference season, and all around the globe—in prefab dorms
in provincial England , in luxury hotels in Jerusalem , in the underground
chapel at Heathrow—English professors are on the loose. In this
second installment in the delightful trilogy of academic satires
David Lodge began with Changing Places and ended with Booker
Prize nominee Nice Work , the sun has not quite set on
the sexual revolution while political correctness has not yet reared
its humorless head. Join old friends Morris Zapp and Phillip Swallow,
along with a memorable, somewhat oversexed cast of dozens—including
a beautiful and mysterious conference addict, a blue-blooded Italian
Marxist sadist, and the embittered American novelist and his uncomprehending
Japanese translator—as they convene on the conference circuit to
compete and couple (and attend the occasional lecture).
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3 |
| Judges |
Professor Richard Cobb,
Anthony Curtis, Polly Devlin, John Fuller, Ted Rowlands |
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