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Orange Prize Other

Who will win the 2011 Orange Prize?

The winner of the 2011 Orange prize will be announced next Wednesday, but who will pick up the trophy?

I think that the shortlist is very strong and, unlike previous years, there is no obvious front runner.

My personal favourite is Room, but the long list selection proved that the judges favor more literary novels and so I’d be surprised if it won.

I think the real discussion in the judge’s secret chamber will come down to whether The Memory of Love or Great House should win. The Memory of Love has recently won The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and so many people are tipping it to win the Orange, but whilst I admired the writing I found the plot so slow that it was almost non-existent. Great House has a complexity not present in The Memory of Love and this will mean that the re-reading the judges must do will reveal many extra qualities missed on a first reading. This won’t be so true for The Memory of Love. It is a tough call and I’m sure the judges will spend a long time agonising over the decision, but I think in the end they will decide that Great House should win the Orange prize.

The bookies don’t agree with me. William Hill currently have Room as the favourite:

Book

Odds of Winning Orange Prize

Room 2/1
The Memory of Love 3/1
Grace Williams Says it Loud 5/1
Great House 5/1
Annabel 6/1
The Tiger’s Wife 6/1

This is probably due the fact that the other titles aren’t as well known as Room, rather than an indication of the relative quality of the books.

Who do you think will win the Orange Prize on 8th June?

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May Summary and Plans for June

May was a slow month reading-wise. This was mainly caused by reading several average books in a row. I didn’t want to inundate you with negative reviews so will spread them out over the coming weeks. The good news is that my run of unenjoyable books seems to have come to an end – first with the wonderful  Anatomy of a Disappearance and then with Night Waking (review coming soon). I’ll keep my fingers crossed that my June reading will be more to my liking.

Book of the Month

Anatomy of a Disappearance

Books Reviewed in May

Anatomy of a Disappearance – Hisham Matar 

The Illumination – Kevin Brockmeier 

Piercing – Ryu Murakami 

Empire of the Sun – JG Ballard 

Monster Love by Carol Topolski 

The Periodic Table – Primo Levi 

Pigeon English – Stephen Kelman 

The Whisperer – Donato Carrisi 

King of the Badgers – Philip Hensher 

Plans for June

Gormenghast

The Gormenghast Trilogy

My Gormenghast read-along starts at the beginning of June and I’m really looking forward to discussing it all with you. I have to admit that I couldn’t wait and read the first 50 pages over the weekend. The first few pages were hard going, but after about 5 pages I was hooked. The imagery is fantastic and it is quickly becoming one of the most atmospheric books I’ve ever read. It isn’t too late to join in. I’m sure your library has a copy – go and grab it and read along with us!

I’m hoping to get several guest posts from Gormenghast fans who have a deeper insight into the book than me – it should be really interesting.

Shantaram

Shantaram

I don’t do a read-along for months and then suddenly two come along at once! I have been wanting to read Shantaram for ages and so couldn’t resist when I saw Aths from Reading on a Rainy Day  and Helen from Helen’s Book Blog were planning to read it.

These two chunksters will occupy the majority of my reading time for the next few months, so I won’t be able to read as many other books as usual. The good news is that I have a backlog of six books that I haven’t reviewed yet so hopefully I’ll be able to continue reviewing books at the same pace as usual.

In between the read-alongs I also hope to read some of these books:

Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier
Family Matters by Rohinton Mistry
When the Killing’s Done by TC Boyle
The Forgotten Waltz by Anne Enright

Have a wonderful June!

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Triple Choice Tuesday

Today I’m featured on Triple Choice Tuesday over at Reading Matters.

Each week Kim asks bloggers, writers and readers to pick a favourite book, a book that changed their world and a book that deserves a wider audience.

Head over to Kim’s blog to see which books I selected.

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Gormenghast Read-along Schedule

The Gormenghast Trilogy

Wednesday is Gormenghast Day!

For the next few months this blog will celebrate Gormenghast every Wednesday. The schedule for the read-along is detailed below. It would be great if different people could lead the discussion each week so that you don’t just get my opinion (and I don’t get Gormenghast post burnout!). If you’d like to volunteer to write a Gormenghast post at some point during the read-along then please leave a comment below. You don’t have to have a blog – I’d love non-bloggers to take part too. 🙂

Titus Groan – June 2011

The Hall of the Bright Carvings – Near and Far (p1 – p100) 8th June

Dust and Ivy – Preparations for Arson (p101 – p194) 15th June

The Grotto – The Bloody Cheekbone (p194 – p277) 22nd June

The Twins Again – Mr Rottcodd Again (p277 -p361) 29th June

Gormenghast – July 2011

One – Eighteen  (p373 – p467) 6th July

Nineteen – Thirty-Seven (p467 – p565) 13th July

Thirty-Eight – Fitft-Eight (p565 – p659) 20th July

Fifty-Nine – Eighty  (p659 – p752) 27th July

Titus Alone – August 2011

One – Fifty-Eight (p759 -p854) 10th August

Fifty-Nine – One Hundred and Twenty-Two (p855 – p953) 17th August

Titus Awakes – September 2011

This book is 288 pages long – Ill update this post with the exact page numbers for this read-along once I have a copy and can check for appropriate chapter breaks.

Note: All page numbers for the Gormenghast Trilogy come from my Vintage Classics copy (ISBN: 0099288893), but if you have a different edition the page numbers may vary slightly.

I look forward to reading Gormenghast with you!

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Gormenghast Read-along?

The Gormenghast Trilogy

I was inspired to read The Gormenghast Trilogy after hearing wonderful things about it at the Vintage Classics Day. A couple of people mentioned that they’d also like to read it and so I thought I’d see if anyone was interested in participating in a read-along.

Gormenghast is a cult classic that has been described as:

one of the most distinctive, absorbing and wonderfully strange books ever written.

It is set in a crumbling castle and describes the lives of the heirs to this dark kingdom. I’m afraid I don’t know much more about it, but I’m looking forward to finding out!

Amazon states that it is a book:

no reader interested in Gothic dare to miss.

The fourth book in the “trilogy” is being released in July and so it seems appropriate to read these books now, making the way through the entire series in one long stint.

I was thinking about starting the read-along in June, but am not sure about what pace to take.

Are you interesting in reading Gormenghast with me?

If so, how quickly would you like to progress through the books?

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Essential Books of the Decade?

A few weeks ago I attended an evening in London hosted by Penguin publishers. The aim of the night was to introduce bloggers to some of their authors and to highlight the new Penguin Essentials series. Several bloggers have already posted about the event, so if you’d like to know what we got up to take a look at their informative posts.

The Penguin Essentials are some of the twentieth-century’s most important books. When they were first published they changed the way we thought about literature and about life. And they have remained vital reading ever since.

The Penguin Essentials collection covers books published in the twentieth-century, but Penguin challenged the bloggers present to come up with a list of the most important books published in the last decade.

Here are the books I chose:


The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon

This book brought the difficulties of autism to the attention of the general public for the first time. Its simplicity and charm will ensure that it remains one of the most important fictional books about autism.

Beside the Sea

Beside the Sea by Veronique Olmi

Life as a parent is hard. Life as a single parent is even harder. This book is an powerful reminder that tragedy can occur if we do not do more to look after vulnerable members of our society. Those who have read it will not forget it.

The Kindly Ones

The Kindly Ones by Jonathan Littell

This book will be remembered for its graphic depictions of the Holocaust, but it is also a stark reminder of how easily normal people can be persuaded to commit atrocities.  It is hard to imagine a more comprehensive book on Holocaust perpetrators ever being written.

This Blinding Absence of Light

This Blinding Absence of Light by Tahar Ben Jelloun

This book is proof that human beings can survive in almost unimaginable conditions. It will always be one of the definitive books about imprisonment.

The Reluctant Fundamentalist

The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid

I really hope that this book dates quickly and becomes an intriguing insight into cultural differences at the beginning of the 21st century, but whether this happens or not, this book will always be a clever reminder that the way you see a story depends upon your preconceived ideas.

We Need To Talk About Kevin (Serpent's Tail Classics)

We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver

The overbearing feeling of responsibility and fear that a parent feels is seldom mentioned, but the difficult relationship between a mother and child is exceptionally well described in this book. I think that mothers will connect with this story for many years to come.

The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas

The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas by John Boyne

The Holocaust is so disturbing that many people avoid reading about it. This book tackles the subject in a simple, but effective way and allows the topic to be introduced to a younger generation.

Persepolis

Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi

Graphic novels have become increasingly popular recently and this is the finest example from the last decade. It gives a personal and political insight into life in Iran and I can only see it becoming more widely read as graphic novels become more mainstream.

Never Let Me Go

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro

Organ failure will become an increasing problem for the elderly as science finds a cure to many of the other diseases of old age. Never Let Me Go raises many of the issues that our society might face as it progresses and so I think it will become an increasingly important text.

The Road

The Road by Cormac McCarthy

The relationship between a father and son is rarely investigated in literature, but this book gives a moving insight into the strong bond that exists between the two. It is also shows how the human survival instinct remains strong even whilst battling the harshest of conditions.

I won the competition and was the lucky recipient of the entire Penguin Essentials series.

I hope to be able to let you know what some of them are like in the near future. Which book from the Essentials series would you like me to read first?

Which books published in the last decade do you think are the most important of the last decade?