2009 Man Booker Prize Shortlist Predictions

The official Man Booker Prize Shortlist for 2009 will be announced on September 8th, 2009.

The TurboBookSnob based her predictions on a combination of metrics, which included reading the novels, newspaper reviews, and "buzz" scores.  In particular, she looked for language that was special and surprising, compelling and driving narratives, and in part, the social relevance that tends to mark Booker Prize winners.

This has been a strong year for previously nominated Booker authors, and the TurboBookSnob's predictions reflect that, with two prior winners, one shortlisted author, two longlisted authors, and one first-time nominee.

 

2009 Shortlist Predictions
  Title/Author TurboBookSnob's Review

The Children's Book

by A.S. Byatt

Publisher:

Chatto & Windus

TurboBookSnob Review Coming Soon!

This beautifully written novel, Byatt's first full-length novel since completing the Frederica Quartet, is brimming with the lively wit and intelligence that marks the Dame's writing.  It is perhaps her best novel since the Booker Prize-winning Possession in 1990. 

The TurboBookSnob would like nothing better than to see Byatt become the first woman to win two Man Booker Prizes!

Publisher's Comments:

Olive Wellwood is a famous writer, interviewed with her children gathered at her knee. For each of them she writes a separate private book, bound in different colours and placed on a shelf. In their rambling house near Romney Marsh they play in a story-book world - but their lives, and those of their rich cousins, children of a city stockbroker, and their friends, the son and daughter of a curator at the new Victoria and Albert Museum, are already inscribed with mystery. Each family carries their own secrets. Into their world comes a young stranger, a working-class boy from the potteries, drawn by the beauty of the Museum's treasures. And in midsummer a German puppeteer arrives, bringing dark dramas. The world seems full of promise but the calm is already rocked by political differences, by Fabian arguments about class and free love, by the idealism of anarchists from Russia and Germany. The sons rebel against their parents' plans; the girls dream of independent futures, becoming doctors or fighting for the vote. This vivid, rich and moving saga is played out against the great, rippling tides of the day, taking us from the Kent marshes to Paris and Munich and the trenches of the Somme. Born at the end of the Victorian era, growing up in the golden summers of Edwardian times, a whole generation grew up unaware of the darkness ahead. In their innocence, they were betrayed unintentionally by the adults who loved them. In a profound sense, this novel is indeed the children's book.

A.S. Byatt won the Man Booker Prize in 1990 for Possession.

 

Summertime

by J.M. Coetzee

Publisher:

Harvill Secker

TurboBookSnob Review Coming Soon!

 

Publisher's Comments:

A young English biographer is working on a book about the late writer, John Coetzee. He plans to focus on the years from 1972-1977 when Coetzee, in his thirties, is sharing a run-down cottage in the suburbs of Cape Town with his widowed father. This, the biographer senses, is the period when he was 'finding his feet as a writer'. Never having met Coetzee, he embarks on a series of interviews with people who were important to him - a married woman with whom he had an affair, his favourite cousin Margot, a Brazilian dancer whose daughter had English lessons with him, former friends and colleagues. From their testimony emerges a portrait of the young Coetzee as an awkward, bookish individual with little talent for opening himself to others. Within the family he is regarded as an outsider, someone who tried to flee the tribe and has now returned, chastened. His insistence on doing manual work, his long hair and beard, rumours that he writes poetry evoke nothing but suspicion in the South Africa of the time. Sometimes heartbreaking, often very funny, "Summertime" shows us a great writer as he limbers up for his task. It completes the majestic trilogy of fictionalised memoir begun with "Boyhood" and "Youth".

J.M. Coetzee was the first author to win the Man Booker Prize twice, for The Life and Times of Michael K in 1983, and for Disgrace in 1999.  In addition, he was longlisted for Slow Man in 2005 and Elizabeth Costello in 2003.  He is the winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature.

 

How to Paint a Dead Man

by Sarah Hall

Publisher:

Faber & Faber

TurboBookSnob Review Coming Soon!

Don't let the dry synopsis for this novel fool you - this is an elegant piece of literature, full of wisdom and insight.

Publisher's Comments:

Italy in the early 1960s: a dying painter considers the sacrifices and losses that have made him an enigma, both to strangers and those closest to him. He begins his last life painting, using the same objects he has painted obsessively for his entire career - a small group of bottles. In Cumbria 30 years later, a landscape artist - and admirer of the Italian recluse - finds himself trapped in the extreme terrain that has made him famous. And in present-day London, his daughter, an art curator struggling with the sudden loss of her twin brother while trying to curate an exhibition about the lives of the twentieth-century European masters, is drawn into a world of darkness and sexual abandon. Covering half a century, this is a luminous and searching novel, and Hall's most accomplished work to date.

Sarah Hall was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2004 for The Electric Michelangelo.

 

Wolf Hall

by Hilary Mantel

Publisher:

Fourth Estate

TurboBookSnob Review Coming Soon!

Only the original and intrepid Hilary Mantel could make something dark, delicious, and daring of the oft-told tale of Henry VIII and Thomas Cromwell.  She is a true visionary, and has been able to put together a collection of novels that defy pigeonholing.  If anyone is deserving of at least one Man Booker Prize win, it is definitely Ms. Mantel.

Publisher's Comments:

'Lock Cromwell in a deep dungeon in the morning,' says Thomas More, 'and when you come back that night he'll be sitting on a plush cushion eating larks' tongues, and all the gaolers will owe him money.' England, the 1520s. Henry VIII is on the throne, but has no heir. Cardinal Wolsey is his chief advisor, charged with securing the divorce the pope refuses to grant. Into this atmosphere of distrust and need comes Thomas Cromwell, first as Wolsey's clerk, and later his successor. Cromwell is a wholly original man: the son of a brutal blacksmith, a political genius, a briber, a charmer, a bully, a man with a delicate and deadly expertise in manipulating people and events. Ruthless in pursuit of his own interests, he is as ambitious in his wider politics as he is for himself. His reforming agenda is carried out in the grip of a self-interested parliament and a king who fluctuates between romantic passions and murderous rages. From one of our finest living writers, Wolf Hall is that very rare thing: a truly great English novel, one that explores the intersection of individual psychology and wider politics. With a vast array of characters, and richly overflowing with incident, it peels back history to show us Tudor England as a half-made society, moulding itself with great passion and suffering and courage.

Hilary Mantel was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2005 for Beyond Black.

 

The Glass Room

by Simon Mawer

Publisher:

Little, Brown

TurboBookSnob Review Coming Soon!

This novel is a modernist masterpiece. 

Publisher's Comments:

Cool. Balanced. Modern. The precisions of science, the wild variance of lust, the catharsis of confession and the fear of failure - these are things that happen in the Glass Room. High on a Czechoslovak hill, the Landauer House shines as a wonder of steel and glass and onyx built specially for newlyweds Viktor and Liesel Landauer, a Jew married to a gentile. But the radiant honesty of 1930 that the house, with its unique Glass Room, seems to engender quickly tarnishes as the storm clouds of WW2 gather, and eventually the family must flee, accompanied by Viktor's lover and her child. But the house's story is far from over, and as it passes from hand to hand, from Czech to Russian, both the best and the worst of the history of Eastern Europe becomes somehow embodied and perhaps emboldened within the beautiful and austere surfaces and planes so carefully designed, until events come full-circle.

Simon Mawer was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 1997 for Mendel's Dwarf.

 

Heliopolis

by James Scudamore

Publisher:

Harvill Secker

TurboBookSnob Review Coming Soon!

The TurboBookSnob has been tracking Scudamore as a potential Booker candidate since the release of The Amnesia Clinic, and is thrilled that he made the longlist this year.  This novel was one of the bright surprises of this Booker season.

Publisher's Comments:

Born in a Sao Paulo shantytown, Ludo undergoes a remarkable transformation. Directed by forces beyond his control, he first leaves, then returns to the vast city of his birth - but on the opposite side of its social divide. Now twenty-seven, he works for a vacuous 'communications company', marketing unwanted, unaffordable products aimed at the very underclass into which he was born. He has developed an obsessive, adulterous love for his adoptive sister, whose husband is his only friend. And he has an appetite that can never be satisfied. Welcome to the world of "Heliopolis". By turns comic, violent and poignant, it is a rags-to-riches tale like no other - the story of a man whose destiny moves him around like a chess piece, and risks taking him to the brink of madness and brutality.

This is the first time that James Scudamore has been nominated for the Man Booker Prize.