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Man
Booker Prize Winners & Finalists (2007)
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2007 Winner |
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Title/Author |
The
TurboBookSnob's Comments |
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The
Gathering
by Anne Enright
Publisher:
Jonathan Cape |
This tale
of a clan of nine Irish siblings gathering for the wake of their
brother Liam has been praised by just about every newspaper that
exists. It has been hailed as a fresh twist on the traditional
Irish novel.
Although the story in
Anne Enright's tale may not be original, Enright's language certainly
is, and deserves the comparisons to the writing of Ali Smith and
Patrick McCabe.
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
This tale of a clan of
nine Irish siblings gathering for the wake of their brother Liam
has been praised by just about every newspaper that exists.
It has been hailed as a fresh twist on the traditional Irish novel.
This is the first
time that Anne Enright has been nominated for the Booker Prize.
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2007 Shortlist |
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Darkmans
by Nicola Barker
Publisher:
Fourth Estate |
Nicola
Barker is recognized as one of today's most inventive and original
writers, and Darkmans
has been hailed as another work of great imagination.
Although
this book is the longest of the bunch this year, at over 800 pages,
and is a hefty, time-consuming read that requires one's undivided
attention, the TurboBookSnob believes the creativity contained within
it is vast enough to merit Nicola Barker a spot on the 2007 shortlist.
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
Nicola
Barker is recognized as one of today's most inventive and original
writers, and Darkmans
has been hailed as another work of great imagination.
"If
History is just a sick joke which keeps on repeating itself, then
who exactly might be telling it and why?..... Darkmans
is a very modern book, set in Ashford (a ridiculously modern town),
about two very old-fashioned subjects: love and jealousy.
It's also a book about invasion, obsession, displacement and possession,
about comedy, art, prescription drugs, and chiropody. And
the main character? The past, which creeps up on the present
and whispers something quite dark - quite unspeakable - into its
ear."
At over 800
pages, this novel will pose a challenge to readers attempting to
read the entire longlist in a month, and it has been criticized
for being too long and unfocused. It will be interesting to
see if the judges think this is enough of a cohesive work to merit
a place on the shortlist.
Nicola
Barker was longlisted in 2004 for Clear:
A Transparent Novel. |
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The
Reluctant Fundamentalist
by Mohsin Hamid
Publisher:
Hamish Hamilton |
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
The
Reluctant Fundamentalist is the story of Changez, a Pakistani
immigrant living in New York City. He is thriving in his
new life, until the events of September 11th, 2001 threaten the
fragile framework on which he has built his new life.
This is the first
time that Mohsin Hamid has been nominated for the Booker Prize.
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Mister
Pip
by Lloyd Jones
Publisher:
John Murray |
This novel
seemed to capture the imagination of quite a few bloggers over the
past month, who asserted that this should be considered for the
winner of the Booker this year.
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
"It is Bougainville
in 1991 - a small village on a lush tropical island in the South
Pacific. Eighty-six days have passed since Matilda's last day
of school as, quietly, war is encroaching from the other end of
the island. When the villagers' safe, predictable lives come to
a halt, Bougainville's children are surprised to find the island's
only white man, a recluse, re-opening the school. Pop Eye, aka
Mr Watts, explains he will introduce the children to Mr Dickens.
Matilda and the others think a foreigner is coming to the island
and prepare a list of much needed items. They are shocked to discover
their acquaintance with Mr Dickens will be through Mr Watts' inspiring
reading of "Great Expectations". But on an island at
war, the power of fiction has dangerous consequences. Imagination
and beliefs are challenged by guns..."
This the first time
that Lloyd Jones has been nominated for the Booker Prize.
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On
Chesil Beach
by Ian McEwan
Publisher:
Jonathan Cape |
The TurboBookSnob
wasn't certain that the judges would include this novel. On
the one hand, it is by one of the most esteemed writers today, one
who is certainly destined for a Nobel Prize soon. It is also,
however, more of a novella than a novel, and novellas are not eligible
for the Booker Prize. The writing is crystalline and precise,
and it is evident that McEwan is a master at his craft, however
the ending is problematic and feels as if McEwan randomly decided
one day to wrap the whole thing up with a neat little bow in a few
pages.
TurboBookSnob
Review |
This novel is set in
1962 on the Dorset Coast, following the marriage of Edward and
Florence. As Edward and Florence deal with their apprehensions
about their wedding night, the story flashes back in time to their
initial meeting and courtship, and ultimately examines how a life
can be irrevocably altered in an instant.
Ian McEwan won the
Booker Prize in 1998 for Amsterdam,
and was shortlisted in 2001 for Atonement,
in 1992 for Black
Dogs, and in 1981 for The
Comfort of Strangers. He was also longlisted in 2005
for his novel Saturday.
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Animal's
People
by Indra Sinha
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster |
This story
of an American chemical company's disastrous effect on a slum in
Khaufpur is told through the eyes of the memorable character of
Animal, who walks on all fours as a result of the "accident."
Animal has his own special way of telling his story, and convinces
a journalist researching the disaster to tell it verbatim through
tapes that Animal records for him. The character of Animal
is heartbreaking, infuriating, and ultimately unforgettable.
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
"'I
used to be human once. So I'm told. I don't remember it myself,
but people who knew me when I was small say I walked on two feet
just like a human being...' Ever since he can remember, Animal
has gone on all fours, the catastrophic result of what happened
on That Night when, thanks to an American chemical company, the
Apocalypse visited his slum. Now not quite twenty, he leads a
hand-to-mouth existence with his dog Jara and a crazy old nun
called Ma Franci, and spends his nights fantasizing about Nisha,
the daughter of a local musician, and wondering what it must be
like to get laid. When a young American doctor, Elli Barber, comes
to town to open a free clinic for the still suffering townsfolk
- only to find herself struggling to convince them that she isn't
there to do the dirty work of the 'Kampani' - Animal plunges into
a web of intrigues, scams and plots with the unabashed aim of
turning events to his own advantage..."
This is the first
time that Indra Sinha has been nominated for the Booker Prize.
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2007 Longlist |
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Self
Help
by Edward Docx
Publisher:
Picador |
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
"
...Set between London and St. Petersburg, "Self Help" is the absorbing
story of a family - half-English, half-Russian - with many secrets
and a dark, disturbed history. Masha Glover returns home from
exile, where she dies suddenly and alone. Her twins, Gabriel and
Isabella, must come together and confront the contorted legacy
of the past in the shape of their estranged, malevolent father,
Nicholas, and the pitiless stranger, Arkady Artamenkov. ..."
This
novel has been praised by both the Sunday Times and the Financial
Times.
This is the first
time that Edward Docx has been nominated for the Booker Prize.
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The
Gift of Rain
by Tan Twan Eng
Publisher:
Myrmidon |
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
"Penang,
1939, sixteen-year-old Philip Hutton is a loner. Half English,
half Chinese and feeling neither, he discovers a sense of belonging
in an unexpected friendship with Hayato Endo, a Japanese diplomat.
Philip shows his new friend around his adored island of Penang,
and in return Endo trains him in the art and discipline of aikido.
But such knowledge comes at a terrible price. The enigmatic Endo
is bound by disciplines of his own and when the Japanese invade
Malaya, threatening to destroy Philip's family and everything
he loves, he realises that his trusted sensei - to whom he owes
absolute loyalty - has been harbouring a devastating secret. Philip
must risk everything in an attempt to save those he has placed
in mortal danger and discover who and what he really is."
The
Gift of Rain is Tan Twan Eng's first novel.
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The
Welsh Girl
by Peter Ho Davies
Publisher:
Sceptre |
TurboBookSnob
Review |
The
Welsh Girl has racked up praise from revered authors such
as David Mitchell, Claire Messud, and Lionel Shriver. It
is set during World War II in Wales, when the lives of three very
different people converge - a German Jewish refugee sent to interrogate
Rudolf Hess, a young and impressionable Welsh barmaid, and a German
POW. It is through these people and their experiences that
Davies' explores the pull and strain of nationality and loyalty.
The TurboBookSnob was
impressed with this novel, and will be interested to find out
whether or not it will make the shortlist.
This is Peter Ho
Davies' first novel, although he was named as one of Granta's
Best Young British Novelists in 2003, on the strength of the
short stories that he has published.
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Gifted
by Nikita Lalwani
Publisher:
Viking |
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
Gifted
is another novel that seems to have garnered praise from all of
the major newspapers and publications, and has been endorsed by
Booker Shortlisted author Gerard Woodward.
"Numbers have filled Rumi Vasi's world since she first learned
to count. But it was on a trip to India at the age of 8 that her
mathematical powers acquired their almost supernatural significance.
When she returned home to Cardiff her destiny was sealed: she
was now, and would forever be, the town's 'maths prodigy'. At
14 Rumi is firmly set on the path of a gifted child, speeding
headlong towards Oxford University. As her father sees it, discipline
is everything if the family has any hope of making its mark on
its adoptive country. However, as Rumi gets older and the family's
stark isolation intensifies, numbers start to lose their magic
for the young teenager: she abandons the rigid timetable of her
afternoons to seek out friendship and replaces equations with
rampant spice abuse. As her longing for love and her parents'
will to succeed deepen so too does the rift between generations."
This is Nikita Lalwani's
first novel.
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What
Was Lost
by Catherine O'Flynn
Publisher:
Tindal Street Press |
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
"It
is the 1980s, and Kate Meaney is a serious-minded and curious
young girl - who spends her time with her toy monkey acting out
the role of a junior detective. She notes goings-on at the Green
Oaks shopping centre and in her street, particularly the newsagent's
where she is friends with the owner's son Adrian. When she disappears,
Adrian falls under suspicion and is hounded by the press. It's
2004 and thirty-something Lisa is at work in a cut-price record
store, tearing her hair out at customers' bizarre requests and
the even more bizarre behaviour of her colleagues. While at home,
the futility of her relationship is slowly becoming apparent.
Over shared fishpaste sandwiches, she strikes up a friendship
with security guard Kurt - and, following CCTV glimpses of Kate,
they become entranced by the lost little girl and her connections
with the strange history of Green Oaks itself."
What
Was Lost is Catherine O'Flynn's first novel. Tindal
Street Press is a small independent publishing house located in
Birmingham. This the second book they have published to
be nominated for a Booker Prize (the first book was Astonishing
Splashes of Colour by Clare Morrall, which was shortlisted
in 2003). What
Was Lost was longlisted for the 2007 Orange
Prize for fiction.
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Consolation
by Michael Redhill
Publisher:
William Heinemann |
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
"As
he slips beneath the waves of Toronto's harbour, Professor David
Hollis follows in death the man he pursued in the last months
of his life, English apothecary J. G. Hallam. One hundred and
fifty years earlier, Hallam had been sent by his father to open
a shop in the New World, but when that business failed, he became
a reluctant partner in a photography firm. In 1856, the company
was offered the opportunity to work for the municipal government,
and the bleak and ungainly young city took shape before Hallam's
lens. But after presenting the photographs in England, Hallam's
ship sank in a violent storm on Lake Ontario and the strongbox
holding the photographs was lost. The shoreline of the harbour
has shifted dramatically over a century and a half, and David
Hollis, driven in his pursuit of this important historical record,
speculates that the sunken ship containing the photographs is
in the landfill where the city's new Union Arena is to be built.
With almost no one on his side but his daughter's fiance, John
Lewis, Hallam presents his findings, which are met with howls
of derision from his colleagues. Three months later, he's dead,
and Lewis joins the grieving widow, Marianne, in a furtive, unsettling
quest to vindicate her husband. Installed in a hotel overlooking
the excavation site where the arena is to stand, they await the
moment when a piece of the past reappears that might alleviate
the anguish of these civic and private vanishings..."
This is the first
time that Michael Redhill has been nominated for the Booker Prize.
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Winnie
and Wolf
by A.N. Wilson
Publisher:
Hutchinson |
TurboBookSnob
Review Coming Soon! |
"Albert Speer,
Hitler's architect, liked to say that if Hitler had had a friend,
he would have been that friend. But Hitler did have a friend.
She was Winifred Wagner, (1897-1980) the English girl, brought
up in an orphanage in East Grinstead, and married to the middle-aged
(and incidentally, homosexual) son of Germany's most controversial
genius, Richard Wagner. In this novel, A. N. Wilson will try to
come to grips with the one area of life where Hitler seems like
an imaginable human being, that is in his response to art, and
above all to opera. Like his friend Winnie, he was an outsider.
Like her, he was haunted by the great Wagnerian themes. Both had
known the humiliations of poverty. Both felt angry and excluded
from society. Both found in one another an extraordinary kinship."
A.N. Wilson appeared
on Granta's first list of Best
Young British Novelists in 1983, and although he has published
many novels since then, they have not attracted the attention
of the Booker judges until now. He was even a prize judge
in 1996, when Last
Orders by Graham Swift won.
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2007 Judges |
Howard
Davies (Chair), Wendy Cope, Giles Foden, Ruth Scurr, Imogen
Stubbs |
| TurboBookSnob
Predictions for 2007 |
Which
books did the TurboBookSnob think should have made the cut for 2006?
Check out her predictions.
2007
Shortlist Predictions
2007 Winner Prediction |
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