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Past Winners & Finalists (1969 - 2003)
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Past Man Booker Prize Winners
& Finalists (1994)
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1994 |
| Book
Cover |
Book
Details |
Synopsis
|
TBS
Rank |
1994 Winner |
How
late it was, how late
by James Kelman Publisher:
Secker & Warburg
ISBN: 0385315600
|
Winner of the 1994 Booker Prize, this witty, controversial, and
brilliant bestselling novel has been compared to the works of Joyce,
Beckett, and many other masters.
A
raw, wry vision of human survival in a bureaucratic world, How
Late It Was, How Late opens one Sunday morning in Glasgow,
Scotland, as Sammy, an ex-convict with a penchant for shoplifting,
awakens in a lane and tries to remember the two-day drinking binge
that landed him there. Then, things only get worse. Sammy gets in
a fight with some soldiers, lands in jail, and discovers that he
is completely blind. His girlfriend disappears, the police probe
him endlessly, and his stab at Disability Compensation embroils
him in the Kafkaesque red tape of the welfare system.
A masterpiece of black humor, subtle
political parody, and Scottish lower-class vernacular How Late It
Was, How Late is a classic-to-be from one of today's most talented
novelists. |
6 |
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Beside
the Ocean of Time
by George Mackay Brown
Publisher: John Murray
ISBN:
0719553687
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Thorfinn,
a crofter's son living on the remote island of Norday , is a dreamy
boy. “Idle and useless” according to his teachers. Bored by school,
happier wandering the shores of his island home, he escapes into
the limitless world of his imagination. Closing his eyes in the
1930s he dreams of crossing the “fish-fraught” ocean with Viking
raiders. Falling asleep to the monotonous tones of a history lesson
he finds himself running from the press gang into the arms of a
beautiful seal-maiden who longs to return to the sea. War and adventure,
the struggles of great men and the everyday toil of the fisherfolk,
Thorfinn dreams the sweep of Norday's history, its life and its
inevitable death… |
3 |
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Reef
by Romesh Gunesekera
Publisher: Granta Books
ISBN: 1565842197
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Triton
loved loving in Mister Salgado's house. It was the biggest house
he had ever seen—filled with floors to sweep and silver to polish
and meals to cook and adults to impress and a brilliant master whose
voice was poetry. And people from all around came to the house—to
sell their wares, to talk, to live, for this was where life took
place. Even the sun would rise from the garage and sleep behind
the del tree at night. And in the house life was good.
But beyond Mister Salgado's house there
was a world. And all around them, it was falling apart. |
2 |
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Paradise
by Abdulrazak Gurnah
Publisher: Hamish Hamilton
ISBN: 0684822776
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A
finalist for the 1994 Booker Prize, England 's highest honor for
works of fiction, Paradise is at once the story of an African boy's
coming of age, a tragic love story, and a tale of the corruption
of African tradition by European civilization.
Sold by his father in repayment of a
debt, twelve-year-old Yusuf is thrown from his simple rural life into
the complexities of pre-colonial urban East Africa / Through Yusuf's
eyes, Gurnah depicts communities at war, trading safaris gone awry,
and the universal trials of adolescence. The result is a page-turning
saga that offers a unique perspective on a seldom-chronicled part
of the world. |
5 |
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The
Folding Star
by Alan Hollinghurst
Publisher: Chatto & Windus
ISBN: 0099476916
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Edward
Manners—thirty-three, disaffected, in search of a new life—has come
to an ancient Flemish city to teach English. Almost at once he falls
in love with one of his pupils, the seventeen-year-old Luc Altidore,
recently expelled from school for some mysterious offense. Condemned
to a mounting but incommunicable obsession with the boy, Edward
becomes involved in affairs with two other men: one a heartless
but seductive fraud, the other a young drifter with a deeply possessive
streak.
Then
Edward is introduced to the world of the enigmatic and reclusive
Symbolist painter Edgard Orst. Gradually he is drawn toward an understanding
of the artist's own obsession with a famous actress, drowned off
Ostend at the turn of the century, and of the ambiguous circumstances
of Orst's own death under Nazi occupation.
The
events of The Folding Star are played out amid the silent streets
and canals of a city that seems locked in the past, and across the
northern landscape of out-of-season resorts and abandoned houses
that lies beyond. But in the central panel of the novels triptych
Edward returns home for a funeral and is caught up in memories of
his own late adolescence and his first love affair: an English pastoral
already threatened by the experience of betrayal and loss.
This brilliant book confirms Alan Hollinghurst's
stature as one of the finest novelists now writing in English. |
4 |
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Knowledge
of Angels
by Jill Paton Walsh
Publisher: Green Bay
ISBN: 0395686660
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A fable set on a mythical
island at the time of the Inquisition in which two young outcasts,
captured separately, are brought before the cardinal prince of the
island. The first is a wild, flesh-eating wolf child and the second
is a foreign prince who has proclaimed his disbelief in God. The fate
of the prince will depend on the wolf girl--who is being educated
in a nunnery, where her caretakers have been ordered to teach her
to speak but not to speak of God--and the answer she gives when the
cardinal asks her if God exists. The two prisoners are used as pawns
by the religious council to answer the question of whether or not
believing in God is an inherent part of being human. |
1 |
| Judges |
Professor John Bailey,
Rabbi Julia Newberger, Dr. Alastair Niven, Alan Taylor, James Wood |
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