The New Yorker Fiction Forum

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Click here to see what's happening in the fiction of each issue of The New Yorker.

Last Five Issues: ____________________________

Links & Stuff

A nice article on winning the Booker Prize, by Hilary Mantel.

I'm liking Ron Charles more and more and more, and this video review of Jonathan Franzen's Freedom makes just makes me giddy.

Over at Critical Mass, the blog for the NBCC, Wyatt Mason writes about Roth's "tenth, short, and perfect novel, The Ghost Writer." I agree with Mason; this is one great novel, and a great place to start if you're looking to get to know Roth. Here is my review. It wasn't my first Roth, but it is the book that made him one of my favorite writers of all time (if not my favorite).

This promises to get interesting. Anis Shivani of The Huffington Post has posted his list of the fifteen most overrated contemporary American authors. As usual, he makes some great points. Often when I see these, though, I think, "Okay, so they are bad. Now, tell me who is good -- and why the difference." Shivani promises to follow-up with the most underrated contemporary American writers. Followed with similar lists for American writers of the past century, and going further to include lists for the global writers.

Patricia Zohn interviews Jennifer Egan at The Huffington Post. I still think A Visit from the Goon Squad is one of the best books of the year.

New York Magazine has a nice look at independent bookstores in the City, which are rising "against all odds."

At Reading Matters, Kim has featured my blog on her Triple Choice Tuesday. My choices? The Ghost Writer, So Long, See You Tomorrow, and Butcher's Crossing. Pop on over and see my fresh, brief write-up of each title.

For Independence Day, the Huffington Post has a slide show of fifteen great independent publishers, featuring a few of my favorites -- Open Letter, Archipelago -- and a few I didn't know about. New Directions is a model of perfection, and I agree. I have stacks and stacks of books from these three presses, and I'm anxious to see what the others have to offer.

Michiko Kakutani's review of Jacob de Zoet is surprising in its lack of substance. It's mostly just a plot rehash (which I think gives away a bit too much). It's boring to read and insightless, where I usually enjoy her reviews even if I disagree (as I do here). I'm not saying my reviews are better, surely, but this is pretty poor for The New York Times daily and from a Pulitzer-winning critic.

In the new issue of The New Yorker, James Wood takes a look at The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet: "This is to argue not that David Mitchell should be more like Tolstoy or Conrad or Beckett but, curiously, that he might be more Mitchellian—that the reader wants a kind of moral or metaphysical pressure that is absent, and that has ceded all the ground to pure storytelling."

The Paris Review blog has a Q&A with Jennifer Egan, author of The Goon Squad, a piece of which was published in The New Yorker and discussed here.

Click here for the Never Let Me Go trailer. I didn't like the book as much as I hoped I would, but the trailer makes the film look good. ____________________________

2010 Book Awards

  • National Book Critics Circle Award
    • Winner: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
    • Winner: Sherman Alexie's War Dances
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Brigid Pasulka's A Long, Long Time Ago and Essentially True
  • Pulitzer Prize
  • Orange Prize
    • Winner: Barbara Kingsolver's The Lacuna
  • Man Booker Prize
    • Late July
    • Early September
    • Winner: October 12
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: October
  • Giller Prize
    • Longlist: September 20
    • Shortlist: October 5
    • Winner: November 9
  • National Book Award
    • Finalists: October 13
    • Winner: November
____________________________

2009 Book Awards

  • National Book Critics Circle Award
    • Winner: Roberto Bolano's 2666
  • Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award
    • Winner: Michael Dahlie's A Gentleman's Guide to Graceful Living
  • PEN/Faulkner Award
  • Orange Prize
    • Winner: Marilynne Robinson's Home
  • Man Booker Prize
    • Winner: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall
  • Nobel Prize in Literature
    • Winner: Herta Müller
  • National Book Award
    • Winner: Colum McCann's Let the Great World Spin

National Book Critics Circle Award Winners

2008 – Roberto Bolaño: 2666
2007 – Junot Diaz: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 
2006 – Kiran Desai: The Inheritance of Loss
2005 – E.L. Doctorow: The March
2004 – Marilynne Robinson: Gilead
2003 – Edward P. Jones: The Known World
2002 – Ian McEwan: Atonement
2001 – W.G. Sebald: Austerlitz
2000 – Jim Crace: Being Dead
1999 – Jonathan Lethem: Motherless Brooklyn
1998 – Alice Munro: The Love of  a Good Woman
1997 – Penelope Fitzgerald: The Blue Flower
1996 – Gina Berriault: Women in Their Beds
1995 – Stanley Elkin: Mrs. Ted Bliss
1994 – Carol Shields: The Stone Diaries
1993 – Ernest J. Gaines: A Lesson Before Dying
1992 – Cormac McCarthy: All the Pretty Horses
1991 – Jane Smiley: A Thousand Acres
1990 – John Updike: Rabbit at Rest
1989 – E.L. Doctorow: Billy Bathgate
1988 – Bharati Mukherjee: The Middleman and Other Stories
1987 – Philip Roth: The Counterlife
1986 – Reynolds Price: Kate Vaiden
1985 – Anne Tyler: The Accidental Tourist
1984 – Louise Erdich: Love Medicine
1983 – William Kennedy: Ironweed
1982 – Stanley Elkin: George Mills
1981 – John Updike: Rabbit Is Rich
1980 – Shirley Hazzard: The Transit of Venus
1979 – Thomas Flanagan: The Year of the French
1978 – John Cheever: The Stories of John Cheever
1977 – Toni Morrison: Song of Solomon
1976 – John Gardner: October Light
1975 – E.L. Doctorow: Ragtime

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