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March Book Club shortlist

70 replies

Freddiecat · 02/03/2004 12:32

The shortlist for the bookclub for March is taken from previous winners of The Booker Prize (I thought we'd start with something general). I have chosen 4 winners from relatively recent years but not those from the last 4 years. You may have read some of these but are unlikely to have done so recently. Please make your selections on this thread by 8AM ON FRIDAY 5TH MARCH. I will count the postings and endeavor to post the winner by 10am that day.

The 4 nominees are:
Possession - A.S. Byatt (1990 winner)
The Famished Road - Ben Okri (1991 winner)
Last Orders - Graham Swift (1996 winner)
Disgrace - J.M. Coetzee (1999 winner)

The following information and reviews are taken from Amazon (i.e. not my opinion as I've read none of them). All books are available within 24 hours from Amazon (as an indication of availability) and are in print, in paperback.

Possession ? A.S. Byatt
1990
528 pages - Vintage
"Literary critics make natural detectives", says Maud Bailey, heroine of a mystery where the clues lurk in university libraries, old letters and dusty journals. Together with Roland Michell, a fellow academic and accidental sleuth, Maud discovers a love affair between the two Victorian writers the pair has dedicated their lives to studying: Randolph Ash, a literary great long assumed to be a devoted and faithful husband, and Christabel La Motte, a lesser- known "fairy poetess" and chaste spinster. At first, Roland and Maud's discovery threatens only to alter the direction of their research, but as they unearth the truth about the long- forgotten romance, their involvement becomes increasingly urgent and personal. Desperately concealing their purpose from competing researchers, they embark on a journey that pulls each of them from solitude and loneliness, challenges the most basic assumptions they hold about themselves, and uncovers their unique entitlement to the secret of Ash and La Motte's passion.
Winner of the 1990 Booker Prize, Possession is a gripping and compulsively readable novel. A.S. Byatt exquisitely renders a setting rich in detail and texture. Her lush imagery weaves together the dual worlds that appear throughout the novelthe worlds of the mind and the senses, of male and female, of darkness and light, of truth and imaginationinto an enchanted and unforgettable tale of love and intrigue

The Famished Road ? Ben Okri
1991
592 pages - Vintage
You have never read a novel like this one. Winner of the 1991 Booker Prize for fiction, The Famished Road tells the story of Azaro, a spirit-child. Though spirit-children rarely stay long in the painful world of the living, when Azaro is born he chooses to fight death: "I wanted", he says, "to make happy the bruised face of the woman who would become my mother." Survival in his chaotic African village is a struggle, though. Azaro and his family must contend with hunger, disease and violence, as well as the boy's spirit- companions, who are constantly trying to trick him back into their world. Okri fills his tale with unforgettable images and characters: the bereaved policeman and his wife, who try to adopt Azaro and dress him in their dead son's clothes; the photographer who documents life in the village and displays his pictures in a cabinet by the roadside; Madame Koto, "plump as a mighty fruit", who runs the local bar; the King of the Road, who gets hungrier the more he eats.
At the heart of this hypnotic novel are the mysteries of love and human survival. "It is more difficult to love than to die", says Azaro's father, and indeed, it is love that brings real sharpness to suffering here. As the story moves toward its climax, Azaro must face the consequences of choosing to live, of choosing to walk the road of hunger rather than return to the benign land of spirits. The Famished Road is worth reading for its last line alone, which must be one of the most devastating endings in contemporary literature (but don't skip ahead).

Last Orders ? Graham Swift
1996
320 pages - Picador
From the author of Waterland and Ever After, Last Orders is a quiet but dazzling novel about a group of men, friends since the second world war, whose lives revolve around work, family, the racetrack and their favourite pub. When one of them dies, the survivors drive his ashes from London to a seaside town where they will be scattered, compelling them to take stock of who they are today, who they were before and the shifting relationships in between. Both funny and moving, this won the Booker Prize in 1996.

Disgrace ? J.M. Coetzee
1999
224 pages - Vintage
Disgrace takes as its complex central character 52-year-old English professor David Lurie whose preoccupation with Romantic poetryand romancing his studentsthreatens to turn him into a "a moral dinosaur". Called to account by the University for a passionate but brief affair with a student who is ambivalent about his embraces, David refuses to apologise, drawing on poetry before what he regards as political correctness in his claim that his "case rests on the rights of desire." Seeking refuge with his quietly progressive daughter Lucie on her isolated small holding, David finds that the violent dilemmas of the new South Africa are inescapable when the tentative emotional truce between errant father and daughter is ripped apart by a traumatic event that forces Lucie to an appalling disgrace. Pitching the moral code of political correctness against the values of Romantic poetry in its evocation of personal relationships, this novel is skillfulalmost cunningin its exploration of David's refusal to be accountable and his daughter's determination to make her entire life a process of accountability. Their personal dilemmas cast increasingly foreshortened shadows against the rising concerns of the emancipated community, and become a subtle metaphor for the historical unaccountability of one culture to another.

OP posts:
Mummysurfer · 02/03/2004 12:34

Last Orders

momof2 · 02/03/2004 12:44

The Famished Road

suedonim · 02/03/2004 13:29

Disgrace

hoxtonchick · 02/03/2004 13:46

possession. no agreement yet then...

AussieSim · 02/03/2004 13:46

Possession

Bron · 02/03/2004 13:49

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

CountessDracula · 02/03/2004 13:49

Disgrace (but have already read it, would happily read again!)

Kayleigh · 02/03/2004 13:57

Possession

Demented · 02/03/2004 14:00

Disgrace sounds good.

Beetroot · 02/03/2004 14:05

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Message withdrawn

donnie · 02/03/2004 14:14

Definitely The famished Road - the Swift and Byatt are both v hard to read and rather pretensious IMHO. Haven't read the Coetzee yet though....the Ben Okri is a lovely book.

bossykate · 02/03/2004 15:40

disgrace please!

bundle · 02/03/2004 15:44

oh god, anything but last orders..

Posey · 02/03/2004 19:26

Sorry Bundle, my vote goes to Last Orders
So thats just me and you Mummysurfer!

CP · 02/03/2004 19:32

WOW! How about 'Disgrace' it is not one that I would normally choose - hence joining a bookclub I guess.

justiner · 02/03/2004 19:52

Not trying to sway anyone here but Disgrace ranks as one of my top 10 novels... probably put the kiss of death on that one

Marshy · 02/03/2004 20:18

Disgrace sounds interesting - though am finding it a challenge just reading the reviews!

Marina · 02/03/2004 20:25

Disgrace I think...Bundle, my no-no would be Possession. I either love or loathe AS Byatt and didn't get on with that one at all!
I've never read any JM Coetzee so need a good incentive to give him a try.
Thanks very much Freddiecat for organising!

OldieMum · 02/03/2004 20:30

I vote for Last Orders. Having spent the last few years researching post-apartheid South Africa, I found the characters in Disgrace stereotypical and the message of the book almost nihilistic in its pessimism about the country. I've been meaning to read Last Orders for a long time and would love to have an incentive to do so.

expatkat · 02/03/2004 20:37

possession

but would probably be happy with any of them.

Chinchilla · 02/03/2004 21:33

Possession - but only because I have it, and couldn't get into it. I need an excuse to make myself read it!

dinosaur · 02/03/2004 22:12

Have read Disgrace and Possession - would be quite happy to reread either - or could go for Last Orders as have read and enjoyed other Graham Swift. So basically I'm easy - will go with the majority.

JanHR · 02/03/2004 22:16

Possession sounds like my kind of book

Issymum · 03/03/2004 08:15

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at OP's request

Sonnet · 03/03/2004 11:48

Last Orders gets my vote....(but am happy to read aany of them except the Famished road - for some reason this dosn't appeal at all..)

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