The Costa Book Award Winner Has Been Announced!

Formally known as the Whitbread Prize, the Costa Book Award rewards authors who write something that we readers enjoy reading.  Hmm…well, maybe there’s more to the prize than that; you can check out the Costa Prize site here.  There are five winners, each in a different category: First Novel, Novel, Biography, Children’s Literature, and Poetry (see the other category winners below).  Then, from those five winners, a super-duper winner is chosen as the Costa Book Award Winner of the Year.

Congratulations to Nathan Filer, who has won the award for his debut novel The Shock of the Fall, a “moving account of schizophrenia and grief.” (Click here for more from the Guardian article.)  Filer is a nurse working in the mental health system in the UK, so I am intrigued to read this insider’s account, albeit fictional.

I have already requested the book from my local library…stay tuned for more.  Oh, and it beat the other contenders:

Life After Life by Kate Atkinson
The Pike by Lucy Hughes-Hallett
Goth Girl and the Ghost of a Mouse by Chris Riddell
Drysalter, a poetry collection by Michael Symmons Roberts

Happy Reading!
 

National Book Critics Circle Award Finalists Announced!

The short list is out for the National Book Critics Circle Award.  Click here to read the entire article in the LA Times.

The fiction finalists are:

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Americanah (Knopf) A LITERARY MASTERS SELECTION: OCTOBER 2013

Alice McDermott, Someone (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)

Javier Marías, The Infatuations, translated by Margaret Jull Costa (Knopf)

Ruth Ozeki, A Tale for the Time Being (Viking)

Donna Tartt, The Goldfinch (Little, Brown)

As you know, Americanah was Literary Masters’ October book; everyone loved it and we had fantastic discussions.  (For more on Literary Masters, click on link to the right of where you are now reading.)  I am currently reading The Goldfinch–not loving it as much as I thought I would (expectations, expectations) but it’s early days yet.  This is one long book.

I want to read the others…

The winner will be announced in March!

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

Happy 2014 to you all!  Have you made your new year’s resolutions?  Have you made your new year’s reading resolutions?  Hmm…I’ll have to do another post about that one of these days.  Today, though, I want to share a little gem of a book with you:

 I saw this in a book store and immediately bought it to give to my friend, Kim.  She’s always drinking out of a mug that say Keep Calm and Carry On; it kind of fits her personality, to be honest.  She has an aristocratic demeanor about her.  I thought I’d give her this book to show her how we non-nobles cope.

When I went to the counter to pay, the clerk asked me if I wanted it wrapped, and I said ‘no’ so I could enjoy the book first.  (Is that a bad thing?)  Well, days later…hmm…weeks later…I am still enjoying it! 

It’s a collection of maxims from various people, one on each page.  Let me share one or two with you:

“The only thing to do with good advice is to pass it on.  It is never of any use to oneself.”  ~Oscar Wilde

“Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I’m not sure about the former.” 
~Albert Einstein

Or how about this zinger:

“Forget the past–the future will give you plenty to worry about.”  ~George Allen, Sr.

Or:

“Hard work never killed anybody, but why take a chance?” ~Edgar Bergen

Or:

“Experience is a comb that life gives you after you lose your hair.” ~Judith Stern

If you. like me, find wisdom in pessimism, this book will crack you up.  And if you’re an optimist, read it and see how the other half thinks.  As for Kim, I think I’ll let her just Keep Calm and Carry On for a bit longer…

More Best Books!

OK, I realize that I am a week late with this NY Times link (click here) of Notable Books of 2013, but it was Thanksgivukkuh!  Anyway, lots of ideas for books to read and to give as gifts.  Literary Masters book groups and salons have already read and discussed two books from the list: Americanah and The Woman Upstairs.  One of these days I will get around to reviewing each of these wonderful novels–and I will fill you in on the riveting discussions that we had!

This month we are reading another novel that made the NY Times list: We Are Completely Beside Ourselves.  And our LM selection for May is The Lowland.  Hmm…do you think the NY Times consulted the Literary Masters list of titles for our 2013/14 season before posting their notable books list?  You can check it out also on my website; just click here.

I’ve read some of the others.  I must say, the James Salter novel disappointed me (I heard a collective gasp just now), but I really liked The Dinner and have recommended it to many people.  I loved The Circle and think it is a fabulous book for discussion as it raises many pertinent issues.  It’s NOT sci-fi if it’s happening to us right now for real!

I didn’t love Kate Atkinson’s Life After Life as much as everyone else apparently has, but it is a good enough read.  I didn’t think Schroder measured up to the hype.

Tenth of December: yes, do read it.  Ditto The Son, if for no other reason than to tell me what you think of it!

Here are the books on this list that I really want to read and that I hope find their way into my Christmas stocking (are you listening, Santa?):

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt.  Her first novel The Secret History is one of my favorite books, and I am so looking forward to reading her latest, which is getting rave reviews all around.

The Good Lord Bird by James McBride, which just won the National Book Award.

The Sound of Things Falling by Juan Gabriel Vasquez

Dirty Love by Andre Dubus III

I have just started A Constellation of Vital Phenomena by Anthony Marra, but I fear I will have to return it to the library before I finish it!

Stay tuned for more end of the year “best books” lists to come!

Best Books of 2013: Just in Time for Thanksgivukah!

I am feeling conflicted.  It’s only mid-November and I am posting a “Best of 2013” reading list.  I feel like this is almost wrong–like seeing Christmas decorations in the stores before Thanksgiving!  However, it’s an unusual holiday season this year with Hanukkah coinciding with our annual turkey day celebration–an event, according to the Mail Online, that last occurred in 1888 and won’t occur again for another 79,000 years!  Wow!  I can see why their headline read “Happy Thanksgivukah!”–this is something to celebrate!

And while we’re at it, let’s celebrate some wonderful books that have been written, read, and discussed in 2013.  I will be posting more titles and “Best of 2013” lists throughout the coming weeks and into the new year, but for now, here’s the first.  It’s from Publisher’s Weekly, and you can click here to find out more about each of these intriguing titles.

Publishers Weekly Best Books of 2013
Seas of Hooks by Lindsay Hill
Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief by Lawrence Wright
Dirty Wars: The World is a Battlefield by Jeremy Scahill
Men We Reaped: A Memoir by Jesmyn Ward
The People in the Trees by Hanya Yanagihara
Lost Girls: An Unsolved American Mystery by Robert Kolker
Miss Anne in Harlem: The White Women of the Black Renaissance by Carla Kaplan
A Constellation of Vital Phenomena by Anthony Marra
The Silence and the Roar by Nihad Sirees, translated by Max Weiss
The Good Lord Bird by James McBride

Wow!  What a list–we are spoiled for choice.  Something for every reader on your holiday list!

The Samuel Johnson Prize: We Have a Winner!

I think you know by now that Literary Masters book groups and literary salons focus mainly on fiction, but each season we ‘dig deep’ into a non-fiction treasure.  My favorite so far, and I think my LM members would agree, is Nothing to Envy by Barbara Demick, which won the Samuel Johnson Prize, the UK’s premier award for non-fiction work, in 2010.

The 2013 winner of this prestigious award has just been announced, so let’s congratulate Lucy Hughes-Hallett, author of The Pike.  Her account of “a celebrated poet and Italian nationalist who was simultaneously repugnant and alluring” is evidently a form-breaking type of biography that escapes the restrictions of the genre.  Sounds intriguing.  The book won over an impressive shortlist of titles:

 

For more information on the Samuel Johnson Prize, including past winners, click here.

What good non-fiction have you read recently?

National Book Award Finalists!

I told you that I just love this time of year!  Crisp mornings, sunny and warm afternoons, the Nobel Prize, the Man Booker, and now the National Book Award has released its list of finalists!  Click here  for all the info; I mainly pay attention, as you know, to the fiction category:

 The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner
 The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
 The Good Lord Bird by James McBride
 Bleeding Edge by Thomas Pynchon
 Tenth of December by George Saunders

As you also know, this season Literary Masters book groups and salons are reading Rachel Kushner’s previous novel Telex from Cuba and The Lowland by Lahiri.

Have you read any of these books?  Your thoughts?

The Nobel and the Man Booker

I love this literary time of year!  Literary Masters book groups and salons have started up again, the Nobel committee awards its prizes, and suspense builds for who will win the Man Booker Prize.  If this blog is the first media that you turn to each day

you’re just learning that Alice Munro is the 2013 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature.  Congratulations to a master of the short story!

Now we can all look forward to next Tuesday, when the winner of the Booker will be announced.  In case you need to be reminded of the short list, here it is.

Enjoy!

Reading Literary Fiction Proven To Be Good For Us!!!

Hallelujah!  Finally, a study that proves what I’ve known ALL ALONG and have tried to convince others of: reading literary fiction, the type of fiction we Literary Masters members read each and every season, is GOOD FOR US!  It makes us more empathetic and understanding of others; it strengthens our emotional intelligence.  If you ever, ever, ever have had any pang of guilt while reading our monthly selection, if you ever have thought, “Oh, I shouldn’t be reading; I should be doing something more useful,” well, think again!  Clearly, reading literary fiction will make you a better person, which will lead to a better society all around.

To find out more about how reading literary fiction is the solution to all the world’s problems (OK, maybe I’m getting slightly carried away here, but still…) click here to read the fascinating article from The New York Times.

Then go sit down and read a great novel!

The Ten Best Books About Women

Everyone loves lists, right?  They make life easier.  So, even though I have no clue who the author Bidisha is, I am willing to see what she deems to be “the ten best books about women” in her recent article in the UK’s Guardian.

What a list!  I’ve only read two of these books, but one was very influential in forming my literary “career”–Reading Lolita in Tehran.  And because that wonderful book is on Bidisha’s list, I’m willing to give the others a try.  I am particularly intrigued by Joan of Arc: In Her Own Words and Intercourse.  Wow, the TBR pile next to my bed just got higher!

Click here for the full list.  What would your Ten Best Books About Women list look like?