My 2024 Booker Prize Longlist Rankings

The 2024 Booker Prize winner will be announced Tuesday, and this is the first year I have read the entire longlist prior to the announcement. (I will not meet my Goodreads goal, so this is my reading accomplishment of the year!) If you’ve followed me, you know I had some predictions prior to the announcementContinue reading “My 2024 Booker Prize Longlist Rankings”

PLAYGROUND – Richard Powers

“You know me now. You know him as well as I did. Maybe better. You have raised the dead and given us one more turn. Now tell me how this long match ought to end.” “Our first god mad the world from eggshells and tears and bone. Then our artists made the other gods outContinue reading “PLAYGROUND – Richard Powers”

CREATION LAKE – Rachel Kushner

“The French might have better novels (Balzac, Zola, and Flaubert) and they have better cheese (Comte, Roquefort, Cabecou). But in the grand scheme that’s basically nothing.” “Bad people are honored, and good ones are punished. The reverse is also true. Good people are honored, and bad people are punished, and some will call this grace,Continue reading “CREATION LAKE – Rachel Kushner”

STONE YARD DEVOTIONAL – Charlotte Wood

“A feeling that something is coming, waiting to be born, out of this time. Almost physical, like before a period, or pregnancy, or vomiting. Something is getting ready to resolve itself.” The Booker journey continues with Charlotte Wood’s Stone Yard Devotional (Allen & Unwin 2023), yet another thin volumed character reflection, heavy on the introspectiveContinue reading “STONE YARD DEVOTIONAL – Charlotte Wood”

WILD HOUSES – Colin Barrett

We’re a week out from the shortlist announcement, and I just finished my ninth from the Booker Dozen.  In following this year’s theme of thin volumes and character studies, Wild Houses by Colin Barrett (Grove Press 2024) is a gritty look at small town Irish life – heavy on drugs, violence, and hopes to escapeContinue reading “WILD HOUSES – Colin Barrett”

WANDERING STARS – Tommy Orange

“I wasn’t trying to be funny. I could have done it if you hadn’t come. We’ve just been the feather. We used to be the whole bird. We used to believe and we were the whole bird.” Next up on my Booker journey is Tommy Orange’s Wandering Stars (Knopf 2024). Wandering Stars is a bookendContinue reading “WANDERING STARS – Tommy Orange”

THE SAFEKEEP – Yael van der Wouden

“Little baby Jesus everywhere. They have no problem letting Jews into their homes as long as they’re carved from wood, do they” “What did people who spoke of joy know of what it meant, to sleep and dream only of the whistle of planes and knocks at the door and on windows and to wakeContinue reading “THE SAFEKEEP – Yael van der Wouden”

THIS STRANGE EVENTFUL HISTORY – Claire Messud

“This strange eventful history that made a life. Not good orbad – rather both good and bad – but that was not the point. Above all, theyhad been, for so long, wildly curious. Just to see, to experience all thatcould deny, to set foot anywhere, to speak to anyone, taste anything, to learn,to know.” IContinue reading “THIS STRANGE EVENTFUL HISTORY – Claire Messud”

ORBITAL – Samantha Harvey

“Raw space is a panther, feral and primal; they dream it stalking through their quarters.” “There’s a lingering sense of an unfinished dream, something wild in his thoughts.” The Booker train is certainly off to a roaring start, and I think this may be the first year I complete the longlist before the winner isContinue reading “ORBITAL – Samantha Harvey”

HELD – Anne Michaels

“Stories told on a battlefield, on a life raft, in a hospital ward at night. In a café that will disappear before morning. Someone overhears. Someone listens, attentive with all his heart. No one listens. The story told to one who is slipping into sleep, or into unconsciousness, never to wake.  The story told toContinue reading “HELD – Anne Michaels”