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2004 Man Booker Prize Longlist
The
longlist for this year's Man Booker Prize was announced on Thursday, August
26th.
This
year's longlist seemed to follow the Booker's trend over the past few
years. Eschewing former prize winners and members of the London literary
elite, the judges instead included a handful of books that suffered scant
attention from the press. This is sure to change over the coming
month!
The
chair of the judges, MP Chris Smith was quoted as saying:
"This
has been a very rich year for fiction and we have a strong and varied
long-list of 22 books. I'm particularly pleased that there are a number
of first or second novels on the list as well as a number of well-established
writers. The list is a mixture of seriousness and fun; it ranges across
several continents; it goes back and forwards in time; and getting a
short-list of six out of this variety will be a nightmare.”
|
2004 Man Booker Prize Longlist |
| Title |
Author |
Publisher's
Comments |
| Purple
Hibiscus |
Chimamanda Adichie
Fourth
Estate |
From
the outside, fifteen-year-old Kambili has the perfect life. She
lives in a beautiful house, has a caring family, and attends an
exclusive missionary school. She's completely shielded from the
troubles of the world. Yet, as Kambili reveals in her tender-voiced
account, things are less than perfect in her wealthy Nigerian home.
Although her papa is generous and well respected, he is fanatically
religious and tyrannical at home. He looms over his family's every
move, severely punishes Kambili and her older brother, Jaja, if
they're not the best in their classes, and hits their mama if she
disagrees with him. Home is silent and suffocating.
But
everything changes once Kambili and Jaja visit Aunty Ifeoma outside
the city. For the first time they experience freedom from their
papa. Jaja learns to garden and work with his hands, and Kambili
secretly falls in love with a young, charismatic priest.
As
the country begins to fall apart under a military coup, tension
within the family escalates. And shy Kambili must find the strength
to keep her family together after her mother commits a desperate
act.
Purple
Hibiscus is a stunning debut that captures the fragile beauty
of a young woman's awakening at a time when both country and family
are on the cusp of change. |
| Maps
for Lost Lovers |
Nadeem
Aslam
Faber
& Faber |
In an unnamed town in England, Jugnu
and Chanda have disappeared - and Chanda's brothers have been arrested
for their murder. What follows is an unravelling of all that is sacred
to the family, as the pious Kaukab tries desperately to square the
traditional justice of her culture with the more personal consequences
of their murder. 'Maps for Lost Lovers' opens the heart of a family
at the crossroads of culture, community, nationality and religion
and expresses their pain and desire in a language that is arrestingly
poetic. |
| Clear:
A Transparent Novel |
Nicola
Barker
Fourth
Estate |
A
Granta Best of British Novelist 2003 Winner of the IMPAC PRIZE for
her novel Wide Open. On 5th September 2003, New York Illusionist
David Blaine entered a small perspex box adjacent to the River Thames
and commenced starving himself. 44 days later -- on 19th October
-- he left the box, four stone lighter. That much, at least, is
clear.And the rest? The crowds? The chaos? The hype? The rage? The
rows? The lust? The filth? The bullshit? The hypocrisy? Nicola Barker
fearlessly crams all that and more into this ribald and outrageous
peep show of a novel, her most irreverent, caustic, up-to-the-minute
work yet, laying bare the heart of our contemporary world, a world
of illusion, delusion, celebrity and hunger. |
| The
Island Walkers |
John
Bemrose
John
Murray |
For
generations, the Walkers have lived in the Island, a small, working
class mill-town beside Ontario's Attawan River. But in the summer
of 1965 their peace is shattered. When a union organiser comes to
town, Alf Walker is forced to choose between loyalty to his friends
and advancement up the company ranks. His decision threatens to
overwhelm not only his own life, but also his family.
Through
the course of the book, we come to know the Walkers intimately -
Alf, as he attempts to keep ahead of these turbulent events; his
son Joe, whose world is overturned by the passion and uncertainty
of young love; and his wife Margaret, who must reconcile her English
upbringing with the world in which she finds herself.
The Island Walkers
is a deeply moving novel of a family struggling to make its way
through a changing world. Written with remarkable understanding
and perception, it reveals a writer of rare vision and accomplishment.
|
| Havoc,
In Its Third Year |
Ronan
Bennett
Bloomsbury |
England in the 1630's: a difficult
country in turbulent times. John Brigge is a governor a man who has
kept away from intrigues to work on his farm and be with his wife,
now expecting their first child. He is also - secretly - a Catholic.
When he is called to settle the murder of a new-born child, Brigge
finds himself drawn into matters he wants to avoid. Katherine Shay,
an Irishwoman is accused of killing her baby. Brigge wants to wait
for more evidence. The ascendant puritan faction, however, demand
her immediate hanging. Brigge suspects their haste has little to do
with their talk of justice. What are they hiding? And does he really
want to know? In the background, a rebellion is brewing. Only Brigge
- and his investigation - can change the tide. Torn between home and
the world, haunted by the mystery of Katharine Shay he must finally
make a stand. |
| Jonathan
Strange and Mr. Norrell |
Susanna
Clarke
Bloomsbury |
English
magicians were once the wonder of the known world, with fairy servants
at their beck and call; they could command winds, mountains, and
woods. But by the early 1800s they have long since lost the ability
to perform magic. They can only write long, dull papers about it,
while fairy servants are nothing but a fading memory.
But at Hurtfew
Abbey in Yorkshire, the rich, reclusive Mr Norrell has assembled
a wonderful library of lost and forgotten books from England's magical
past and regained some of the powers of England's magicians. He
goes to London and raises a beautiful young woman from the dead.
Soon he is lending his help to the government in the war against
Napoleon Bonaparte, creating ghostly fleets of rain-ships to confuse
and alarm the French.
All goes well
until a rival magician appears. Jonathan Strange is handsome, charming,
and talkative — the very opposite of Mr Norrell. Strange thinks
nothing of enduring the rigors of campaigning with Wellington's
army and doing magic on battlefields. Astonished to find another
practicing magician, Mr Norrell accepts Strange as a pupil. But
it soon becomes clear that their ideas of what English magic ought
to be are very different. For Mr Norrell, their power is something
to be cautiously controlled, while Jonathan Strange will always
be attracted to the wildest, most perilous forms of magic. He becomes
fascinated by the ancient, shadowy figure of the Raven King, a child
taken by fairies who became king of both England and Faerie, and
the most legendary magician of all. Eventually Strange's heedless
pursuit of long-forgotten magic threatens to destroy not only his
partnership with Norrell, but everything that he holds dear.
Sophisticated,
witty, and ingeniously convincing, Susanna Clarke's magisterial
novel weaves magic into a flawlessly detailed vision of historical
England. She has created a world so thoroughly enchanting that eight
hundred pages leave readers longing for more. |
| Always
the Sun |
Neil
Cross
Scribner |
What do you do when your son is bullied?
How far will you go to protect him from those who seek to cause him
harm? Jamie is thirteen years old, an only child. His mother has recently
died. He and his father Sam have moved to Sam's home town. A fresh
start. An aunt to lend support. A new job for Sam, a new school for
Jamie. But one day Jamie comes home, bearing the scars of every parent's
nightmare. Something must be done...So it begins. |
| Bitter
Fruit |
Achmat
Dangor
Atlantic
Books |
The last time Silas Ali encountered the Lieutenant, Silas was locked
in the back of a police van and the Lieutenant was conducting a
vicious assault on Lydia, his wife. When Silas sees him again, by
chance, twenty years later, crimes from the past erupt into the
present, splintering the Ali's fragile family life. Bitter Fruit
is the story of Silas and Lydia, their parents, friends and colleagues,
as their lives take off in unexpected directions and relationships
fracture under the weight of history. It is also the story of their
son Mickey, a student and sexual adventurer, with an enquiring mind
and a strong will. An unforgettably fine novel about a brittle family
in a dysfunctional society. |
| Becoming
Strangers |
Louise
Dean
Scribner |
Jan has been dying for six years, bringing
his unhappy marriage with Annemieke to an end in middle age. Their
sons have given them one last gift, a holiday in the Caribbean. Dorothy
and George have also been given a holiday, by their granddaughter
- their first and probably last trip overseas. In the rain of Bexhill-on-Sea,
two weeks at a beach resort seems irresistible. Alone together, in
perfect surroundings, they are unable to escape their troubles, until
a few chance events - a disappearance, an assault and a man called
Bill Moloney - allow them to make something out of the ashes of their
love. This is a different love story - about how there's seldom a
'happily ever after', but sometimes a chance to redeem a life together
half-lived. |
| A
Blade of Grass |
Lewis
Desoto
Maia Press
|
Marit Laurens, a young woman of British
descent, recently orphaned and newly wed, comes to live with her husband
Ben on their farm in an Edenic setting near the border of South Africa.
But when guerrilla violence and tragedy visit their lives, Marit finds
herself in a tug of war between the local Afrikaaners near the farm
and the black workers who live on it. Frightened and confused, she
turns to the only person who can offer her friendship - her maid,
Tembi. Marit stubbornly determines to run the farm with Tembi's help,
until the encroaching civil war brings out their conflicting loyalties
and turns their struggle into a fight for their lives. Written with
exquisite lyricism and deep insight, this novel offers a profound
perspective on what it means to be black and white in a country where
both live and feel entitlement. Moving beyond its own time and place,
it becomes a universal story of the price of freedom. |
The
Electric
Michelangelo |
Sarah
Hall
Faber
& Faber |
Beginning
as a humble apprentice in Morecambe Bay , Cy flees to America , where
he sets up his own tattoo business on the infamous Coney Island boardwalk.
In this carnival environment of roller-coasters and freak shows, Cy
becomes enamoured with Grace, a mysterious circus performer.
|
| Cooking
with Fernet Branca |
James
Hamilton-Paterson
Faber &
Faber |
Gerald Samper, an effete Englishman
and ghostwriter for celebrities, lives on a hilltop in Tuscany. His
idyll is shattered by the arrival of Marta, a vulgar woman from the
Soviet Republic. The neighbours' lives disastrously intertwine as
the English obsession with Tuscany is satirized. |
| The
Honeymoon |
Justin
Haythe
Picador |
Arising young screenwriting star in
the film world, thirty-year-old Justin Haythe landed squarely on the
literary map with his very first publication, a story in "Harper's
magazine. In his debut novel, "The Honeymoon, Haythe delivers a deeply
observant and nuanced tale, set in London and Venice at the end of
the twentieth century, in which a young man looks back on a series
of events that have caused his life to unravel. Until the age of twenty-one,
American-born Gordon Garrety hasn't reflected much on his unusual
and peripatetic childhood, spent largely as the traveling companion
of his eccentric mother, Maureen. Only when Gordon meets Annie, several
years his senior and the daughter of a cabdriver from North London,
does he begin to emerge from the sphere of his mother's influence.
The first time they meet, Gordon and Annie make love in a park and
soon after are married. Over the course of a year in London, Gordon
and Annie construct for themselves an idea of married life, into which
Maureen's restless spirit occasionally intrudes. Accompanied by Maureen
and her bibulous Swiss fiance, Gerhardt, Annie and Gordon finally
take their long-delayed honeymoon to Venice, where they are instantly
seduced by the world's most unlikely city. Yet the brilliance of Venice
seems to distort rather than illuminate, and the story gathers a palpable
intensity before a single act of absurd but devastating violence pricks
their happy bubble and lays bare the emptiness at the core of their
gilded lives. Beautifully crafted, gently funny, and genuinely surprising,
Justin Haythe's remarkably assured debut will astound readers with
its dead-on depiction of the dangers of desultory and privileged lives.
|
| The
Great Fire |
Shirley
Hazzard
Virago
|
The Great Fire is Shirley Hazzard's
first novel since The Transit of Venus, which won the National Book
Critics Circle Award in 1981. The conflagration of her title is the
Second World War. In war-torn Asia and stricken Europe, men and women,
still young but veterans of harsh experience, must reinvent their
lives and expectations, and learn, from their past, to dream again.
Some will fulfill their destinies, others will falter. At the centre
of the story, a brave and brilliant soldier finds that survival and
worldly achievement are not enough. His counterpart, a young girl
living in Occupied Japan and tending her dying brother, falls in love,
and in the process discovers herself. In the looming shadow of world
enmities resumed, and of Asia's coming centrality in world affairs,
a man and a woman seek to recover self-reliance, balance, and tenderness,
struggling to reclaim their humanity. |
| The
Line of Beauty |
Alan
Hollinghurst
Picador |
In
the summer of 1983, twenty-year-old Nick Guest moves into an attic
room in the Notting Hill home of the Feddens: conservative Member
of Parliament Gerald, his wealthy wife Rachel, and their two children,
Toby-whom Nick had idolized at Oxford -and Catherine, highly critical
of her family's assumptions and ambitions.
As the boom years of the eighties unfold, Nick, an innocent in the
world of politics and money, finds his life altered by the rising
fortunes of this glamorous family. His two vividly contrasting love
affairs, one with a young black clerk and one with a Lebanese millionaire,
dramatize the dangers and rewards of his own private pursuit of
beauty, a pursuit as compelling to Nick as the desire for power
and riches among his friends. Richly textured, emotionally charged,
disarmingly comic, this U.K. bestseller is a major work by one of
our finest writers.
|
| Sixty
Lights |
Gail
Jones
Harvill
Press |
In 1860,
when they are just eight and ten, Lucy Strange and her brother Thomas
are orphaned. Left now in the care of their uncle, the children
begin slowly, frighteningly, to find their place in the difficult
world. And so begins Lucy's adolescent journey of discovery, one
which will take her away from her childhood home in Australia, first
to London, then to Bombay and, finally, to her death, at the age
of twenty-three. It is a life abbreviated, but not a life diminished.
Lucy is a remarkable character, forthright, gifted and exuberant;
she touches the lives of all who know her. Written in confident,
finely interwoven and intricate layers, Sixty Lights is
the powerful chronicle of a modern and independent young woman's
life in the Victorian world. Objects evoke memories and hint at
the future in a narrative that flows between pleats in time. Through
her observation of such objects Lucy's photographic vision is apparent.
Her world is a series of still images which one day, printed on
albumen paper, she will leave as affecting mementoes of her own
extraordinary life. |
| Cloud
Atlas |
David
Mitchell
Sceptre |
From
David Mitchell, the Booker Prize nominee, award-winning writer and
one of the featured authors in Granta's "Best of
Young British Novelists 2003" issue, comes his highly anticipated
third novel, a work of mind-bending imagination and scope.
A
reluctant voyager crossing the Pacific in 1850; a disinherited composer
blagging a precarious livelihood in between-the-wars Belgium; a
high-minded journalist in Governor Reagan's California; a vanity
publisher fleeing his gangland creditors; a genetically modified
"dinery server" on death-row; and Zachry, a young Pacific
Islander witnessing the nightfall of science and civilization —
the narrators of Cloud Atlas hear each other's echoes
down the corridor of history, and their destinies are changed in
ways great and small.
In his
captivating third novel, David Mitchell erases the boundaries of language,
genre and time to offer a meditation on humanity's dangerous will
to power, and where it may lead us. |
| The
Unnumbered |
Sam
North
Scribner |
The setting is present day London;
a familiar scene you may think, but the people who inhabit this London
are not the office workers, the shoppers, who form the lifeblood of
the city, but those who move around its edges, the dispossessed, who
live quite a different existence, under the tunnels and the waste
grounds that the rest of us hurry by. Some are refugees, some are
escaping from the blanket of domesticity; some have fallen through
violence. They all try to survive. Nio a young Greek man has built
a hidden home in Coldfall Woods, near St Pancras Cemetery. Mila, a
spirited Romanian refugee lives with her family in a huddle of caravans
near the North Circular Road. Nio is a dreamer, Mila is feisty. Together
they will take on this ragged life; together they will win. But theirs
is not an easy city. Their London exacts a hard tribute. There are
pitfalls in this London, from which the dispossessed, however strong
their will, find hard to recover. A wonderful, heartwarming, heartbreaking
tale of a love that takes on all that such a city might throw at it.
|
| Snowleg |
Nicholas
Shakespeare
Harvill
Press |
A young Englishman visits Cold War Leipzig with a group of students
and, during his brief excursion behind the Iron Curtain, falls for
an East German girl who is only just beginning to wake up to the
way her society is governed. Her situation touches him, but he is
too frightened to help. He spends the next 19 years pretending to
himself that he is not in love until one day, with Germany now united,
he decides to go back and look for her. But who was she, how will
his actions have affected her and how will he find her? All he knows
of her identity is the nickname he gave to her - Snowleg.
Nicholas
Shakespeare's first novel since The Dancer Upstairs is a powerful
love story that explores the close, fraught relationship between
England and Germany, between a man who grows up believing himself
to be a chivalrous English public-schoolboy and a woman who tries
to live loyally under a regime where every move is not only recorded,
but where a person's scent may be secretly bottled, labeled and
stored away until such time as she needs to be traced.
|
| Cherry
|
Matt
Thorne
Weidenfeld
& Nicholson |
Who or what is Cherry? Steve Ellis
doesn't know and he's beginning not to care. All he knows is that
as soon as his perfect woman came into his life all the flatness and
misery went away. But happiness comes with a price. When you meet
a man in a bar and he arranges for you to fall in love there's bound
to be some strings attached. Steve might be suspicious about playing
along with the game, but he's convinced he can handle it, a belief
that may well lead to his downfall ... Some people will do anything
for love ... or what they think is love. Anything. In Steve Ellis
Matt Thorne gives us a uniquely memorable fictional creation, and
this arresting new novel is a haunting study of what can happen when
your dream partner enters your life. |
| The
Master |
Colm
Toibin
Picador |
Like
Michael Cunningham in The Hours, Colm Tóibín
captures the extraordinary mind and heart of a great writer. Brilliant
and profoundly moving, The Master tells the story of Henry
James, a man born into one of America 's first intellectual families
two decades before the Civil War. James left his country to live
in Paris , Rome , Venice , and London among privileged artists and
writers.
In
stunningly resonant prose, Tóibín captures the loneliness
and longing, the hope and despair of a man who never married, never
resolved his sexual identity, and whose forays into intimacy inevitably
failed him and those he tried to love. The emotional intensity of
Tóibín's portrait of James is riveting. Time and again,
James, a master of psychological subtlety in his fiction, proves
blind to his own heart and incapable of reconciling his dreams of
passion with his own fragility.
Tóibín
is "a great and humanizing writer" who describes complex
relationships in "supple, beautifully modulated prose" (
The Washington Post Book World ). In The Master,
he has written his most ambitious and heartbreaking novel, an extraordinarily
inventive encounter with a character at the cusp of the modern age,
elusive to his own friends and even family, yet astonishingly vivid
in these pages. |
| I'll
Go to Bed at Noon |
Gerard
Woodward
Chatto
& Windus |
Colette Jones has had drink problems in the past, but now it seems
as though her whole family is in danger of turning to alcohol. Her
oldest son has thrown away a promising musical career for a job
behind the counter in a builders' merchants, and his drinking sprees
with his brother-in-law Bill, a pseudo-Marxist supermarket butcher
who seems to see alcohol as central to the proletarian revolution,
have started to land him in trouble with the police. Meanwhile Colette's
recently widowered older brother is following an equally self-destructive
path, having knocked back an entire cellar of homemade wine, he's
now on the gin, a bottle a day and counting. Who will be next? Her
youngest son had decided to run away to sea, but when her own husband
hits the bottle Colette realises she has to act. As the pressure
builds on Colette to cope with these damaged people, her own weaknesses
begin to emerge, and become crucial to the outcome of all their
lives. By way of an odyssey through the pubs, parks and drying-out
clinics of suburban North London, Gerard Woodward's richly woven
second novel I'll Go To Bed At Noon charts in microscopic detail
the continuing history of a troubled but unforgettable family (first
encountered in August) as it lurches from farce to tragedy and back
again, and from one end of the 1970's to the other, and at the same
time presents an unflinching portrait of British society in the
unstable years leading up to the Thatcher revolution. |
The TurboBookSnob
predicted 5 of the 22 books on this year's longlist - Purple
Hibiscus, The
Electric Michelangelo, The
Line of Beauty, Cloud
Atlas, and The
Master. While she respects the judges' decisions, she also believes
that the books she predicted are worth reading!
See
the TurboBookSnob's 2004 Longlist Predictions. |