Thursday, August 30, 2007

Alisia's Intro

Okay, so it's taken me a bit to get around to writing an introduction. *sheepish grin* I was happy to see Laura start this blog, as reading all of the Booker winners has been a personal goal of mine for about 2 years now. I haven't made it very far, so hopefully the group support will provide a bit more motivation, as I do love almost every Booker winner that I read!

Here are the books I have already read (those highlighted lead to a book review on my blog):
  1. 2006 - The Inheritance of Loss - Kiran Desai
  2. 2002 - Life of Pi - Yann Martel
  3. 2001 - True History of the Kelly Gang - Peter Carey
  4. 2000 - The Blind Assassin - Margaret Atwood
  5. 1997 - The God of Small Things - Arundhati Roy
  6. 1985 - The Bone People - Keri Hulme
  7. 1983 - Life and Times of Michael K - JM Coetzee
The next Booker I will probably read is The Sea, The Sea by Iris Murdoch. I'm just not sure when I'll be reading it.

Heat and Dust - Laura's Review


Heat and Dust
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
181 pages

First sentence: Shortly after Olivia went away with the Nawab, Beth Crawford returned from Simla.

Reflections: Winner of the Booker Prize in 1975, this novel tells the parallel stories of two young English women, living in India at different time periods. Anne visits the country in the 1970s, well after Indian independence in 1947, but long before India became the economic power it is today. Anne is there to learn more about her grandfather's first wife, Olivia, who lived there in the 1920s, during British colonial rule. Olivia ran off with the Nawab (a Muslim prince), bringing scandal down upon the family. The novel alternates between the two time periods and points of view. Anne deciphers Olivia's story from her letters, written primarily to her sister. She visits places Olivia used to live. Houses have become places of business; only the British cemeteries are left standing as a memorial to earlier times.

Ruth Prawer Jhabvala was born in Germany to Polish parents in 1927, attending Jewish schools and moving to England in 1939. She married an Indian man in 1951, and relocated to New Delhi. There she began her literary career. Unlike many Europeans, she took instantly to India and celebrated the country through her writing. Since the mid-1970s, Jhabvala has been better known for her screenplays, having collaborated with Merchant Ivory on such wonderful films as Room with a View, Howards End, and Remains of the Day.

Heat and Dust paints a vivid picture of India; the title alone evokes a common first impression of the country. I made a brief visit there on business two years ago, and of course I was struck by the heat and dust. I also found it difficult to witness the extreme contrasts of wealth and poverty. Jhabvala doesn't shrink from these images, either. There is a scene in the novel that concerns a beggar woman dying in the street. No one will help her for fear of contracting her disease. The hospitals are too full to accommodate cases where there is no hope. Anne and another woman can only help her find a peaceful place to spend her final hours.

As the novel progresses we learn more about Olivia, a naive young woman who is bored and lonely. She is drawn into the excitement of the Nawab's palace, and one can almost understand why she would leave her rather dull husband. The novel is less clear about the character of Anne. Like Olivia she develops a romantic relationship with an Indian man, but she is far more independent and self-sufficient (perhaps reflective of the time period). The novel ends rather abruptly and inconclusively. I liked this book, but honestly was not "wowed" in the way I expect of prizewinning novels. ( )

Original review can be found here.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Kristen's Intro

Hi everyone! I'm really excited about this challenge, especially now that I've figured out how few Booker prize books I've actually read. I read The English Patient (when I was in high school, so I didn't get it at all), The Remains of the Day which I love, and Midnight's Children which I liked. (I also may have read Offshore -- I know I've read something by Fitzgerald, just not sure which! I guess I'll have to pick it up again and see if it's familiar...)

I think I'm going to pick up The Blind Assassin next. Can't wait to check out everyone else's reviews!

Monday, August 20, 2007

Hello! Valentina's Introduction

Hi everybody, just a little note to say that I just joined this project.I really like the idea that there's no time limit, and that it's definitely shorter than the Pulizter list. I must say though that I haven't read ANY so far. So I have a long way to go. I only have two books in my TBR mountain, which are The Sea by John Banville and Paddy Clarke Ah ah ah! by Roddy Doyle so I think I'll start with those ones, don't know when though. I can't wait to be able to say, proudly, I've read EVERY Booker prize!:)
Any idea who's going to win this year?

raidergirl3 intro and progress

Glad to be here, sharing the madness and good books. I like that this list is shorter than the Pulitzer, but you know, the Giller list is even shorter!
Here's my official, periodically updated list of Bookers I've read:

  • 2008 The White Tiger Aravind Adiga 4 stars
  • 2007 The Gathering - Anne Enright 4 stars
  • 2002 The Life of Pi read in 2004 and loved it 5 stars
  • 2000 The Blind Assassin reviewed here 3 stars
  • 1997 The God of Small Things reviewed here 4 stars
  • 1996 Last Orders - Graham Swift 3.5 stars
  • 1993 Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha read in the 1990s ?
  • 1989 The Remains of the Day - Kazou Ishiguru 4.5 stars
  • 1985 The Bone People reviewed here 5 stars
  • 1984 Hotel du Lac - Anita Brookner 4 stars
  • 1983 The Life and Times of Michael K - JM Coetzee 2.5 stars
  • I found a big old list of Bookers I'd like to read and the next ones that top the list, also periodically updated, are:

  • 2004 The Line of Beauty - Hollinghurst
  • 2001 True History of the Kelly Gang - Peter Carey
  • 1998 Amsterdam - McEwan

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Jill's Introduction

I have a modest (almost chaste) start to this challenge with only two books read. My reviews are linked as well:

Bookers Already Read

Life of Pi (Yann Martel) - 2002 (review posted only to LibraryThing):
This book was fascinating in how a young man, Pi Patel, survives on a lifeboat with a deadly Bengal Tiger. I was drawn to Pi's survival instincts and willingness to live - his cleverness, knowledge of animals, resourcefulness and devout religious beliefs were all instrumental to his survival.

Despite this, I found this novel too long-winded. It would have been more fascinating as a short story. For example, the first 100 pages set up how Pi became knowledgeable in animals and spiritual in many religions - all of which could have been reduced to a few pages. Furthermore, the algae-filled island was very unrealistic and unnecessary to the story.

I was also disappointed that the author, who does such a wonderful job weaving an older Pi in the beginning of the story, leaves this interesting perspective and recollection out as the story progressed. I missed hearing about Pi as a husband, father and scholar as we read about him drifting afloat in the sea.

Many lost parallels, unnecessary details and side stories made this entire novel very weighty. It's too bad because the story's premise is brilliant. ( )

The Blind Assassin (Margaret Atwood) -2000

Bookers Soon To Be Read

I haven't picked any yet - stay tuned!

Vasilly's Intro.

I'm glad that I'm not the only one who hasn't read any of the winners. I've read a couple of nominees like Ali Smith's Hotel World, which I love. I think I'm going to read the nominees and the winners.

Dana's Introduction

Hooray! I'm here! *skips about gleefully*
We'll just start by making a list of bookers with which I have made my acquaintance, and how I felt about them. The ones I have reviewed this year I will repost my reviews here later.

*The Inheritance of Loss (you know, I STILL can't decide on this. Beautiful writing, difficult content)
*The Blind Assassin (not my favorite Atwood, but still brilliant)
*the Bone People (LOVED it-also often a very emotionally difficult read)
*The Remains of the Day (I read this in college and remember almost nothing of it. I am going to have to reread it)

There you have it. The impressive (snort) list of already read Bookers.
This month I am slated to read The God of Small Things and G. I looked at the back cover of G and felt a little non-plussed. We'll see how it goes

Other Resources for Booker Prize Fans

Whether you're new to reading the Booker Prize, or a long-time devotee, the following sites may be of interest:

Man Booker Prize official site: news, author interviews, and archives of winners, shortlists, and longlists.

Yahoo BookerPrize Group: As described on the group's homepage, this reading group reads "one novel a month, choosing from among the long-listed, short-listed and winning novels of the Man Booker Prize, honouring the best British, Irish or Commonwealth novels each year. "

LibraryThing: For LibraryThing members, there are three library catalogs containing Booker Prize nominees and winners through 2006. This is an easy way to locate and add books to your own catalog!

Friday, August 17, 2007

The Blind Assassin - 3M's Review

The Blind Assassin
by Margaret Atwood


2000, 521 pp.

Booker Prize

Rating: 3.5



I was disappointed in this book. I expected great things after loving The Handmaid's Tale earlier in the year. I was especially disappointed as it was over 500 pages; it could have easily lost about 100 pages of detail. I guess that's my main gripe about it. It just seemed too detailed for me. Also I correctly predicted almost all that happened. Long, too detailed, and too predictable. But still, Atwood does know how to turn a phrase, and that is why it still gets a 3.5 star rating.

The Bone People - 3M's Review

The Bone People
by Keri Hulme

1984 , 445 pp.

Rating: 3.5

1985 Booker Prize




I didn't think I was going to like this book at first, and I didn't love it, but it definitely kept me reading and I did care about the characters.

Kerewin is an artist who lives in a Tower by the sea. She likes living by herself and even likes the isolation. She is estranged from her family.

Joe is a factory worker with an adopted son who is always getting into trouble. Joe has a bit of a drinking problem and doesn't keep good tabs on his son. The boy ends up at Kerewin's place, and the three end up becoming friends, if not a quasi family unit. Secrets, lies, and violence lie beneath the surface, though, and threaten to tear them all apart.

The story takes place in New Zealand with Joe and Kerewin being part Maori. Some of the myths, culture, and history of the Maori are also part of the book.

This is a different kind of book that is written in almost a "stream of consciousness" style. I thought this was a bit distracting at first, but then I got used to it and even enjoyed it. I also don't like it when authors use the present tense rather than the past tense. This aspect bothered me for about 3/4 of the book, but then I didn't notice it anymore.

For instance (p. 34) "She picks up the curious pendant one last time, to fondle and admire before she goes downstairs," rather than "She picked up the curious pendant one last time and fondled and admired it before she went downstairs." I guess it's a preference issue.

The Inheritance of Loss - 3M's Review

The Inheritance of Loss
by
Kiran Desai

2005, 318 pp.

Winner: Booker Prize, NBCC

Rating: 3




While this book has garnered much critical acclaim, I found it very difficult to complete. It took me over two months to get through it. Once I put it down, I just wasn't compelled to pick it up again. It sort of felt like a school assignment. Luckily, the last 1/3 of the book went by much faster than the first 2/3. Before reading, I would highly recommend doing a little research if you are ignorant (like I was) of Indian culture or history. One link that shed a little light on the subject for me was here.

There are two settings for the book--America and Kalimpong. Sai lives with her grandfather, a former judge, at the foothills of the Himalayas. She falls in love with Gyan, her tutor, who is sympathetic to the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF). The clash of ideals between the Indians who want change and those who wish to retain aspects of British colonialism is one of the two main conflicts in the novel.

The other conflict is that of the Indians who emigrate to the United States and the conditions of their lives once they live there. Biju, who is the son of the Judge's cook, is one of the lucky few who get a visa to go to America. But once he is there, is he really better off? The novel asks the question -- how much does each person care about their individual culture, nationality, and family. What does our "inheritance" mean to us?

While I appreciate these themes and do think the writing was brilliant at times, I wouldn't recommend this book for most readers.

The Sea - 3M's Review

The Sea
by John Banville

2005, 195 pp.

2005 Booker Prize

Rating: 2




This was not my cup of tea. I don't need an exciting plot to enjoy a book. I don't mind older men looking back on their lives. In a similar vein, I loved Marilynne Robinson's Gilead, although I hated Roth's Everyman. This was closer to Everyman.

Max is a widower that is overly sensitive to smells who is grieving (I guess?) over his wife. He calls her the "c" word and admits he really didn't know her because he preferred not to know her.

Not one character in the book was likable. I guess I was lucky this was short.

Glad to be here!

I'm excited to join this challenge. I love reading award winners, and I've been tracking the Bookers on a spreadsheet for a while.

Sandie

Amy's Intro

I am so happy join this project and have fellow book lovers to share with! I realized that I had several of the award winners on my TBR list but never got to them. However,I have narrowed my focus with some of the on-going projects and am finally making time for the award winners!

Sadly, I have not yet read any Booker Prize winners but I am hoping to read the following before the end of 2007:

Midnight's Children - Rushdie
The Bone People - Hulme
The God of Small Things - Roy
The Blind Assassin - Atwood
The Inheritance of Loss - Desai

3M's Progress

I've not had great luck with enjoying the Bookers thus far. I hope that changes.

All of mine were read in 2007.

2006 - The Inheritance of Loss*** by Kiran Desai
2005 - The Sea** by John Banville
2000 - The Blind Assassin ***1/2 by Margaret Atwood
1997 - The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
1985 - The Bone People***1/2 by Keri Hulme

Thursday, August 16, 2007

The Bone People - Wendy's Review


They traveled lightly, the Gillayleys, not loaded down with trivia. But then, in the end we all travel very lightly indeed. Nothing to carry more substantial than memories...and maybe that's the heaviest baggage of all... -From The Bone People, page 323-

Keri Hulme's Booker Prize winning first novel - The Bone People - is a searing, brutal novel about love, violence, language, and mystery. Set in the bleak environment of a New Zealand sea town, the novel introduces three damaged characters all seeking something more in their lives, all having suffered loss and trauma.

Kerewin Holmes, a frustrated artist who turns to alcohol for solace, has built herself a tower - a self-imposed prison, where she can hide from the world and stave off the pain of her family's rejection. She holds tenaciously to her philosophy of life: "...To care for anything deeply is to invite disaster."

Joe also chooses alcohol to warm his soul. He has lost his wife and is trying to raise his adopted son Simon alone. Joe's love for Simon is a mixture of tenderness and brutality.

Simon, perhaps the most heart wrenching character in the book, is a child with a mysterious past. Washed up on shore after a shipwreck and breathed back to life by Joe, Simon is mute, angry and disturbed. These three characters come together in a clash of culture and ambivalence and burn themselves into the heart of the reader.

Hulmes writing is poetic and lyrical, filled with mystical ambiance and beautiful imagery. It ebbs and flows like the sea, building to a terrible climax. At times, feeling battered and exhausted, I wanted to put the book down and not finish it; but each time the words and the story lured me back. There are some beautiful and haunting passages in this novel, such as when Simon gifts Kerewin an amber, gold, turquoise and coral rosary and Kerewin thinks:

Who owned you?
Prayed with you?
Played with you?
What prayers, said, in what moods?
Joy, or grief?
Love, or anger,
Or tears?
-From The Bone People, pages 140-141-

Hulme treats the reader to a great deal of Maori culture, weaving Maori phrases throughout the novel (she also provides their translation in an appendix). The book veers into mystical realism at times, which I believe actually added to the mood and flavor of the story rather than taking away from it.

The Bone People is not an easy read - it is disturbing and rips at the reader's heart - but, ultimately its words and imagery, its message about what it means to be human, will linger with the reader long after the last page is turned.

Highly recommended; rated 4.5/5; read my original review here.

The Blind Assassin - Wendy's Book Review


Why is it we want so badly to memorialize ourselves? Even while we're still alive. We wish to assert our existence, like dogs peeing on fire hydrants. We put on display our framed photographs, our parchment diplomas, our silver-plated cups; we monogram our linen, we carve our names on trees, we scrawl them on washroom walls. It's all the same impulse. What do we hope from it? Applause, envy, respect? Or simply attention, of any kind we can get? At the very least we want a witness. We can't stand the idea of our own voices falling silent finally, like a radio running down. -From The Blind Assassin, page 95-

In Margaret Atwood's Booker Prize winning novel The Blind Assassin, we are treated to a novel which is a story within a story - a memorial of sorts to the life of two women...Iris Chase Griffin and her sister Laura. The novel opens with the death of Laura...and a mystery. Atwood builds her story through a series of newspaper clippings, flashbacks from Iris' perspective on her life, and a piece of fiction about a man and a woman and the story they weave.

True to Atwood's style, the characters are painstakingly created and come alive on the page. No less detailed, Atwood constructs a small town setting within the bigger context of World War II. The result is a tale Gothic in feel, full of shadowy half truths and complex relationships which come together for a satisfying finish.

To give more detail about the novel would be to reveal spoilers - and so I will simply say "Read it." Atwood is a brilliant novelist that continues to amaze me with her scope and talent.

Highly Recommended; rated 4.5/5; read my original review here.

The Inheritance of Loss - Wendy's Review


Could fulfillment ever be felt as deeply as loss? - From The Inheritance of Loss, page 3 -

Kiran Desai has written a novel of depth and complexity, filled with multiple characters and beautiful, lyrical prose which explores such themes as colonialism, illegal immigration and political strife. I will admit to being somewhat overwhelmed at times due to my ignorance of Indian history, class systems and politics. In fact, this book forced me to do something I seldom do - research the history of the time and geography of the area. What I discovered is a country which is vast in its scope and complicated in its history. For those readers with extensive knowledge about this region, Desai's book will resonate. For those like myself who do not have that knowledge base, this novel will lose some of its power, but is worth reading anyway.

Desai artfully weaves together the stories of several characters, moving from the present day (1980s) to their past histories without a glitch. She examines life in the town of Kalimpong, a hill town nestled in the lower Himalaya of West Bengal, where cultures collide. Kalimpong has a rich history and was the site of violent riots between the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF) and the West Bengal government between 1986 and 1988. Desai's novel drops its characters into the midst of this chaos and allows the reader to gain a better understanding of the vast cultural rifts between the people.

The novel centers around a retired Judge, his granddaughter Sai, the cook, the cook's son Biju and Gyan who is Sai's tutor. All these characters are flawed and seeking fulfillment, and all experience loss as the tale unravels. The Judge, a surly and unhappy man, has little love in his heart for anyone except his dog, Mutt. He is filled with hatred for other Indians, wishing instead he had been born English. Biju also experiences this ambivalence for his own people which seems spawned by his experience of rejection and racism as an illegal immigrant living in America.

The habit of hate had accompanied Biju and he found that he possessed an awe of white people, who arguably had done India great harm, and a lack of generosity regarding almost everyone else, who had never done a single harmful thing to India. - From The Inheritance of Loss, page 86 -

Biju's father (the cook) has sent his only son to America to seek a better life. The cook hopes for contentment and dignity which he believes will come with Biju's success.

He imagined sofa TV bank account. Eventually Biju would make enough and the cook would retire. He would receive a daughter-in-law to serve him food, crick-crack his toes, grandchildren to swat like flies. Time might have died in the house that sat on the mountain ledge, its lines grown indistinct with moss, its roof loaded with ferns, but with each letter, the cook trundled toward a future.
- From The Inheritance of Loss, page 20 -

Sai, having come to live with her grandfather after her parents die, imagines a life of love.

Romantically she decided that love must surely reside in the gap between desire and fulfillment, in the lack, not the contentment. Love was the ache, the anticipation, the retreat, everything around it but the emotion itself. - From The Inheritance of Loss, page 3 -

Finally, Gyan who tutors Sai longs to be part of the political changes. A Nepali who feels torn between his attraction toward Sai and his cultural roots, Gyan is perhaps the saddest character in the book.

He wasn't a bad person. He didn't want to fight. The trouble was that he'd tried to be part of the larger questions, tried to become part of politics and history. Happiness had a smaller location, though this wasn't something to flaunt, of course; very few would stand up and announce, "Actually I'm a coward," but his timidity might be disguised, well, in a perfectly ordinary existence situated between meek contours. - From The Inheritance of Loss, page 299 -

As The Inheritance of Loss unfolded, I was struck by the depth of the prose. Desai reveals the rigid adherence to the class system in simple ways, such as when a maid tells her employer the story of falling in love with a Rai although she herself is a Sherpa.

Before one knew it one could slide into areas of the heart that should be referred to only between social equals. - From The Inheritance of Loss, page 75 -

Desai uncovers the pain of being an illegal immigrant by allowing the reader to see through Biju's eyes as he struggles to find work, sleeps in a basement with rats nibbling on his hair, and longs to return to his homeland.

The issues of colonialism and globalization are constant themes in the novel. It speaks to Desai's gift as a writer that she tackles these immense issues with ease using eloquent prose.

Tenzing was certainly the first, or else he was made to wait with the bags so Hilary could take the first step on behalf of that colonial enterprise of sticking your flag on what was not yours.
- From The Inheritance of Loss, page 171 -

This Sai had learned. This underneath, and on top a flat creed: cake was better than laddoos, fork spoon knife better than hands, sipping the blood of Christ and consuming a wafer of his body was more civilized than garlanding a phallic symbol with marigolds. English was better than Hindi.
- From The Inheritance of Loss, page 33 -


I found myself falling into the rhythm of this novel, absorbing the flavors and sights of a foreign land and striving to understand its people. There are so many facets to The Inheritance of Loss, it is hard to categorize it. I believe Desai has written a novel which fully encompasses the Indian experience. I was touched by how the characters sought out their dreams and futures by looking outside their culture, religion and country when perhaps the answers lay closer to home. Desai touches on this as well at the end of the book when Biju, who is now far less innocent, contemplates the steady stream of immigration from India to America.

This way of leaving your family for work had condemned them over several generations to have their hearts always in other places, their minds thinking about people elsewhere; they could never be in a single existence at one time. - From The Inheritance of Loss, page 342 -

Kiran Desai has written an exquisite novel which is deserving of the Booker Award and its place on the New York Times Most Notable Fiction list. This is a novel to be savored for its stunning prose, complex characters and finely captured sense of place.

Recommended rated 4.25/5; read my original review here.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

The Inheritance of Loss - Laura's Review

The Inheritance of Loss
Kiran Desai
324 pages

First sentence: All day, the colors had been those of dusk, mist moving like a water creature across the great flanks of mountains possessed of ocean shadows and depths.

Reflections: The Inheritance of Loss won the Booker Prize in 2006. The novel is set in India during the 1980s, and the plot centered around political conflict. I'm sure if I had more knowledge of the situation in India at that time, I would have appreciated the novel more. Kiran Desai's prose is lyrical and beautiful. It was her writing that held my interest.

I failed to identify with most of the characters. Each of the main characters is an outsider: for various reasons they are not in their home country or have spent so much time away from India that they feel out of place. For example, two elderly women who spent extensive time in England, ensure they always have on hand "familiar comforts" such as English foods and clothing. This I could relate to, having spent 4 years away from my home country. Although it was a fantastic experience, many times I felt like an outsider and knew I would never be fully part of the local community. I've been surprised to feel even more of an outsider since returning "home." Living abroad changes you in many ways. It's made me stronger and more thoughtful, and increased my curiosity about other cultures. Unfortunately there are few I can share this experience with so it remains a somewhat hidden part of who I am ...

The original review can be found here.