|
Past Winners & Finalists (1969 - 2003)
|
Past Man Booker Prize Winners
& Finalists (2000)
|
2000 |
|
Book Cover
|
Book Details
|
Synopsis
|
TBS Rank
|
2000 Winner |
The
Blind Assassin
by Margaret Atwood
Publisher: Bloomsbury
ISBN: 0385720955 |
The
Blind Assassin opens
with these simple, resonant words: Ten days after the war ended,
my sister Laura drove a car off a bridge. They are spoken
by Iris, whose terse account of her sister's death in 1945 is followed
by an inquest report proclaiming the death accidental. But just
as the reader expects to settle into Laura's story, Atwood introduces
a novel-within-a-novel. Entitled The Blind Assassin , it
is a science fiction story told by two unnamed lovers who meet in
dingy backstreet rooms. When we return to Iris, it is through a
1947 newspaper article announcing the discovery of a sailboat carrying
the dead body of her husband, a distinguished industrialist. Brilliantly
weaving together such seemingly disparate elements, Atwood creates
a world of astonishing vision and unforgettable impact.
|
1 |
|
|
The
Hiding Place
by Trezza Azzopardi
Publisher: Picador
ISBN:
0802138594
|
This
exceptional novel about family, love, and the innocence and terror
of childhood was one of the most applauded and auspicious debuts
of the last year. Compared by reviewers to Angela's Ashes and Wuthering
Heights, The Hiding Place was the only debut work to be shortlisted
for England's prestigious Booker Prize -- in the company of Kazuo
Ishiguro and Margaret Atwood -- and went on to become a universally
praised U.S. national best-seller. Set in a Maltese immigrant community
in Cardiff , Wales , and peopled with sharp-edged, luminously drawn
characters, The Hiding Place is the story of Frankie Gauci, his
wife, Mary, and their six daughters. With her "unusual gift
for letting her characters' interior lives come forth" (The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution), Azzopardi chronicles Frankie's unforgivable
betrayal: gambling away his family's livelihood and eventually the
family itself. The Gaucis' story is seen through the eyes of Dolores,
the youngest daughter and the embodiment of bad luck in her father's
estimation, condemned to bear the mark of a family that is rapidly
singeing at the edges. Dolores presents an unsparing portrayal of
the fear and hopelessness of childhood amid grim poverty and neglect,
of children growing up without safety nets and on sunken foundations.
Sustained by a tightrope tension and a stark, youthful wisdom, The
Hiding Place conjures the coarse sensuality of life among the docks,
the smoky cafes and bars, the crumbling homes and gambling rooms
of Tiger Bay . "Astonishing and iridescent" (The Times,
London), The Hiding Place is a mesmerizing exploration of how family,
like fire, can shift suddenly from something that provides light
and warmth to a dangerous conflagration, sparing no one in its path.
"A harrowing and remarkably self-assured first novel [that]
possesses all the immediacy and emotional power of a memoir...."
-- Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
|
2 |
|
|
The
Keepers of Truth
by Michael Collins
Publisher: Phoenix House
ISBN: 0743218035
|
The
last of a manufacturing dynasty in a dying industrial town, Bill
lives alone in the family mansion and works for the Truth,
the moribund local paper. He yearns to write long philosophical
pieces about the American dream gone sour, not the flaccid write-ups
of bake-off contests demanded by the Truth. Then, old
man Lawton goes missing, and suspicion fixes on his son, Ronny.
Paradoxically, the specter of violent death breathes new life into
the town. For Bill, a deeper and more disturbing involvement with
the Lawtons ensues. The Lawton murder and the obsessions it awakes
in the town come to symbolize the mood of a nation on the edge.
Compulsively readable, The Keepers of Truth startles both
with its insights and with Collins's powerful, incisive writing.
|
4 |
|
|
When
We Were Orphans
by Kazuo Ishiguro
Publisher: Faber & Faber
ISBN: 057120516x
|
The
maze of human memory the ways in which we accommodate and alter
it, deceive and deliver ourselves with it is territory that Kazuo
Ishiguro has made his own. In his previous novels. He has explored
this inner world and its manifestations in the lives of his characters
with rare inventiveness and subtlety, shrewd humor and insight.
In When We Were Orphans , his first novel in five years,
he returns to this terrain in a brilliantly realized story that
illuminates the power of one's past to determine the present.
Christopher
Banks, an English boy born in early twentieth-century Shanghai ,
is orphaned at age nine when his mother and father both vanish under
suspicious circumstances. Sent to live in England, he grows up to
become a renowned detective and, more than twenty years later, returns
to Shanghai, where the Sino-Japanese War is raging, to solve the
mystery of the disappearances.
The
story is straightforward. It's telling is remarkable. Christopher's
voice is controlled, detailed, and detached, it's precision unsurprising
in someone who has devoted his life to the examination of details
and the rigors of objective thought. But within the layers of his
narrative is slowly revealed what he can't, or won't, see: that
his memory, despite what he wants to believe, is not unaffected
by his childhood tragedies; that his powers of perception, the heralded
clarity of his vision, can be blinding as well as enlightening;
and that the simplest desires a child's for his parents, a man's
for understanding may give rise to the most complicated truths.
A masterful combination of narrative
control and soaring imagination, When We Were Orphans , is
Kazuo Ishiguro at his best. |
5 |
|
|
English
Passengers
by Matthew Kneale
Publisher: Hamish Hamilton
ISBN: 0241140684
|
When
Captain Illiam Quillian Kewley and his band of rum smugglers from
the Isle of Man have most of their contraband but not all confiscated
by British Customs, they are forced to put their ship Sincerity
up for charter. The only takers are two eccentric Englishmen
who want to embark for the other side of the globe.
The
Reverend Geoffrey Wilson believes the Garden of Eden was on the
island of Tasmania . His traveling partner, Doctor Thomas Potter,
unbeknownst to Wilson , is developing a revolutionary and sinister
theory of his own, about the races of men. And these passengers
are perhaps only slightly more odd than the crew itself, a diverse
and lively bunch better equipped to entertain one another than to
steer Sincerity around Cape Horn and across the Indian
Ocean . Yet they set sail, pointed southward, and bound for a thrilling,
epic romp across the high seas and cultures of the nineteenth century.
Meanwhile,
an aboriginal in Tasmania named Peevay recounts his people's struggles
against the invading British, who prove as lethal in their good
intentions as in their cruelty. This is no Eden but a world of hunting
parties and colonial ethnic cleansing. As the English passengers
haplessly approach Peevay's land, their bizarre notions ever more
painfully at odds with reality, we know a mighty collision is looming.
Full of dangerous humor, English
Passengers combines wit, adventure, and harrowing historical
detail in a mesmerizing display of storytelling. Narrated by over
twenty different characters, each one so distinct that the reader
has the sense of a story not so much told as dazzlingly peopled, Matthew
Kneale has created a buoyant tale, beautifully presented in a storm
of voices that brings a past age to vivid and memorable life. |
6 |
|
|
The
Deposition of Father McGreevy
by Brian O'Doherty
Publisher: Arcadia
ISBN: 1900850486
|
The
engrossing story of an isolated mountain village in County Kerry
where all the women are mysteriously dying, leaving the priest,
Father McGreevy, to cope with insoluble problems. He struggles to
preserve what remains of his parish, against the rough mountain
elements and the grief and superstitions of his people, and the
growing distrust of the town below. Filled with grace and poetry
yet exploring the locus of misfortune and the very nature of evil.
|
3 |
|
Judges
|
Simon Jenkins, Professor
Ray Foster, Mariella Fostrup, Caroline Gascoigne, Rose Tremain |
|