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Past Winners & Finalists (1969 - 2003)
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Past Man Booker Prize Winners
& Finalists (1993)
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1993 |
| Book
Cover |
Book
Details |
Synopsis
|
TBS
Rank |
1993 Winner |
Paddy
Clarke Ha Ha Ha
by Roddy Doyle
Publisher:
Secker & Warburg
ISBN: 0140233903
|
It
is 1968. Patrick Clarke is ten. He loves Geronimo, the Three Stooges,
and the smell of his hot water bottle. He can't stand his little
brother Sinbad. His best friend is Kevin, and their names are all
over Barrytown, written with sticks in wet cement. They play football,
lepers, and jumping to the bottom of the sea. But why didn't anyone
help him when Charles Levy had been going to kill him? Why do his
ma and da argue so much, but act like everything is fine? Paddy
sees everything, but he understands less and less. Hilarious and
poignant, Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha charts the triumphs, indignities,
and bewilderment of a young boy and his world, a place full of warmth,
cruelty, confusion, and love. |
2 |
| |
Under
the Frog
by Tibor Fischer
Publisher: Polygon
ISBN:
0312278713
|
Shortlisted
for the Booker Prize, Under the Frog follows the adventures of two
young Hungarian basketball players through the turbulent years between
the end of World War II and the anti-Soviet uprising of 1956. In
this spirited indictment of totalitarianism, the two improbable
heroes, Pataki and Gyuri, travel the length and breadth of Hungary
in an epic quest for food, lodging, and female companionship.
|
4 |
| |
Scar
Tissue
by Michael Ignatieff
Publisher: Chatto & Windus
ISBN: 0374254281
|
Scar
Tissue
is a bold and uncompromising report from that other country called
illness. At its heart is a son's account of his mother's voyage
into the world of neurological disease, where she loses first her
memory, and then her very identity, only to gain—at the end—a strange
serenity.
As
the son tells his mother's story, he grows obsessed by his mother's
transformation beyond her self, and sets out on his own quest for
self-discovery—a quest which can end only when he has discarded
everything he has ever believed to be true.
Scar
Tissue is an immensely
powerful novel about love and the acceptance of loss; it looks at
questions of selfhood and selfishness, and records, in language
of painful and memorable precision, the struggle of a mother and
son to survive forgetfulness and destruction. |
5 |
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Remembering
Babylon
by David Malouf
Publisher: Chatto & Windus
ISBN: 0679749519
|
Winner
of the IMPAC Award and Booker Prize nominee
In this rich and compelling novel, written in language of astonishing
poise and resonance, one of Australia's greatest living writers
gives and immensely powerful vision of human differences and eternal
divisions. In the mid-1840s a thirteen-year-old British cabin boy,
Gemmy Fairley, is cast ashore in the far north of Australia and
taken in by aborigines. Sixteen years later he moves back into the
world of Europeans, among hopeful yet terrified settlers who are
staking out their small patch of home in an alien place. To them,
Gemmy stands as a different kind of challenge: he is a force that
at once fascinates and repels. His own identity in this new world
is as unsettling to him as the knowledge he brings to others of
the savage, the aboriginal. |
3 |
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Crossing
the River
by Caryl Phillips
Publisher: Bloomsbury
ISBN: 0679757945
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From
the acclaimed author of Cambridge comes
an ambitious, formally inventive, and intensely moving evocation
of the scattered offspring of Africa . It begins in a year of failing
crops and desperate foolishness, which forces a father to sell his
three children into slavery. Employing a brilliant range of voices
and narrative techniques, Caryl Phillips follows these exiles across
the river that separates continents and centuries.
Phillips's characters include a freed slave who journeys to Liberia
as a missionary in the 1830s; a pioneer woman seeking refuge from
the white man's justice on the Colorado frontier; and an African-American
G.I. who falls in love with a white Englishwoman during World War
II. Together these voices make up a "many-tongued chorus"
of common memory—and one of the most stunning works of fiction ever
to address the lives of black people severed from their homeland.
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2 |
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The
Stone Diaries
by Carol Shields
Publisher: Fourth Estate
ISBN: 014023313x
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From her calamitous
birth in Manitoba in 1905 to her journey with her father to Indiana
, throughout her years as a wife, mother, and widow, Daisy Goodwill
has struggled to understand her place in her own life. Now she listens,
she observes, and through sheer force of imagination, she becomes
a witness of her own life: her birth, her death, and the troubling
misconnections she discovers in between. With irony and humor, Carol
Shields weaves together the poignant story of this twentieth-century
pilgrim in search of herself, and in doing so, creates a story that
is a paradigm of the unsettled decades of our era. |
1 |
| Judges |
Lord Gowrey, Professor
Gillian Beer, Anne Chisholm, Nicholas Clee, Olivier Todd |
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