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opinionated commentary on literary matters - from the complete review


4 December 2022 - Sunday

Monkey imprint | The Guardian critics' best of 2022

       Monkey imprint

       In The Japan Times Kris Kosaka reports how New Monkey imprint broadens the reach of contemporary Japanese literature, as Stone Bridge Press has partnered with the anthology-periodical Monkey: New Writing From Japan (the successor to Monkey Business) to: "create a new imprint focused on contemporary Japanese literature in translation".
       As some of you may recall, this was already announced a while back, but now the first title is (almost) ready -- Itō Hiromi's The Thorn Puller, due out shortly; see also the Stone Bridge Press publicity page (I have an ARC, and should be getting to it soon.)
       This sounds like a promising partnership, and I'm looking forward to seeing the books from the imprint.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



       The Guardian critics' best of 2022

       The Guardian has their critics pick The best books of 2022 in a variety of categories; see, for example, Justine Jordan on what she considers Best fiction of 2022

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



3 December 2022 - Saturday

Scotland's National Book Awards shortlists | Wingate Prize longlist

       Scotland's National Book Awards shortlists

       They've announced the shortlists for Scotland's National Book Awards, in six categories
       This is the first literary prize shortlist announcement I have seen with content-warnings regarding the shortlisted titles -- with, for example, three of the six history-finalists labeled: "Content warning: slavery" (and one: "content warning: oppression").
       The winners will be announced 8 December.

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       Wingate Prize longlist

       They've announced the longlist for next year's Wingate Prize, "awarded to the best book, fiction or non-fiction, to translate the idea of Jewishness to the general reader".
       Two of the longlisted titles are under review at the complete review: The Memory Monster, by Yishai Sarid, and The Books of Jacob, by Olga Tokarczuk.
       The shortlist will be announced next month, and the winner in March.

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2 December 2022 - Friday

Cundill History Prize | Translation Prizes shortlists
NIF Book Prize | South Asian literature

       Cundill History Prize

       They've announced the winner of this year's Cundill History Prize, a US$75,000 award for a: "book that embodies historical scholarship, originality, literary quality and broad appeal", and it is the National Book Award-winning All That She Carried by Tiya Miles; see also the report at Books + Publishing.

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       Translation Prizes shortlists

       The (British) Society of Authors has announced the shortlists for its Translation Prizes.

       A few of the titles are under review at the complete review:
  • The John Florio Prize (for translations from the Italian)
    • Elena Pala's translation of The Hummingbird by Sandro Veronesi (which is also shortlisted for the TA First Translation Prize)

  • The Saif Ghobash Banipal Prize (for translations from the Arabic)
    • Alexander E. Elinson's translation of Hot Maroc by Yassin Adnan

  • The Schlegel-Tieck Prize (for translations from the German)
  • The Scott Moncrieff Prize (for translations from the French)
    • Chris Andrews' translation of A Bookshop in Algiers (published in the US as: Our Riches) by Kaouther Adimi
       The winners will be announced 8 February.

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       NIF Book Prize

       The New India Foundation has announced the winner of this year's Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay NIF Book Prize, a leading Indian non-fiction prize, and it is The Chipko Movement, by Shekhar Pathak; see also the Permanent Black information page.

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       South Asian literature

       In The Guardian Sana Goyal considers What does this year's double Booker win mean for south Asian literature ? (Those would be The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida by Shehan Karunatilaka (which won the Booker Prize) and Tomb of Sand by Geetanjali Shree, in Daisy Rockwell's translation, which won the International Booker Prize.)
       Among the observations:
While [Kanishka] Gupta admires the scale and ambition of “India’s Booker”, the JCB prize for Literature, in India, “the only prizes that really make an impact on sales are both Bookers. None of the other UK or US prizes (unless it’s a Pulitzer won by an Indian) has any bearing,” he notes.

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1 December 2022 - Thursday

New Society of Authors translation prize | RSL International Writers
NZ Prime Minister's Awards for Literary Achievement
Language and the Rise of the Algorithm review

       New Society of Authors translation prize

       The (British) Society of Authors has a great slate of Translation Prizes, and they have now announced a new one, the Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation Translation Prize, "celebrating translations into English from Japanese" -- which: "marks the first Society of Authors prize dedicated solely to translations from an Asian country".
       Great to see -- and one can hope that more awards, covering more languages, will follow.

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       RSL International Writers

       The Royal Society of Literature has announced its second group of 'RSL International Writers'.
       They include The Memory Police-author Ogawa Yōko, Norma Jeane Baker of Troy-author Anne Carson, and The Informers-author Juan Gabriel Vásquez.

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       NZ Prime Minister's Awards for Literary Achievement

       They've announced the Prime Minister's Awards for Literary Achievement in New Zealand, with Stephanie Johnson being honored in the fiction category.

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       Language and the Rise of the Algorithm review

       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of Jeffrey M. Binder's Language and the Rise of the Algorithms, just out from the University of Chicago Press.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



30 November 2022 - Wednesday

Royal Society Science Book Prize | NYTBR 10 Best Books of 2022
Tom Phillips (1937-2022)

       Royal Society Science Book Prize

       They've announced the winner of this year's Royal Society Science Book Prize, and it is A (Very) Short History of Life On Earth by Henry Gee.
       See also the publicity pages from St. Martin's Press and Picador, or get your copy at Amazon.com, Bookshop.org or Amazon.co.uk.

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       NYTBR 10 Best Books of 2022

       "The staff of The New York Times Book Review choose the year's standout fiction and nonfiction", with their The 10 Best Books of 2022.
       I haven't seen any of these, so .....

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       Tom Phillips (1937-2022)

       Tom Phillips, best known for his incredible treated novel, A Humument, has passed away; see, for example, Charles Darwent's obituary in The Guardian and the official Tom Phillips-site.
       My first A Humument was the green-covered first revised edition of 1987, and it made a very great impression on me; if I had to winnow down my book-collection to, say, 100 volumes, this would certainly be one of them.
       Get your copy (of the final edition) at Amazon.com, Bookshop.org or Amazon.co.uk.

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29 November 2022 - Tuesday

Merve Emre Q & A on Murnane | '100 notable African books of 2022'
'Ghana and the Literary Industry' | Clouds review

       Merve Emre Q & A on Murnane

       In the Sydney Review of Books Joseph Steinberg has a Q & A with Merve Emre on Gerald Murnane's Signposts.

       I have a pile of Murnanes to get to, but several are already under review at the complete review, including my favorite, Barley Patch.

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       '100 notable African books of 2022'

       At Brittle Paper they list 100 notable African books of 2022 -- a useful overview.
       I'm disappointed by how few of these I've seen. Two of them are, however, under review at the complete review: Casablanca Story, by In Koli Jean Bofane, and The Night Will Have Its Say, by Ibrahim Al-Koni.

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       'Ghana and the Literary Industry'

       At PEN Transmissions Elizabeth Johnson writes: "on the literary scene in Ghana, who's building it, and the value of publishing on the continent", in Ghana and the Literary Industry.

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       Clouds review

       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of Aristophanes' Socratic comedy, Clouds.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



28 November 2022 - Monday

Shehan Karunatilaka Q & A | Miss Lizzie review

       Shehan Karunatilaka Q & A

       At Scroll.in Sayari Debnath has a lengthy Q & A with the Booker Prize-winning author of The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida, in ‘I guess now I finally have a writing career’: Shehan Karunatilaka on winning the 2022 Booker Prize.
       Karunatilaka also discusses his earlier novel, Chinaman -- and he muses:
I still have half a mind to continue my copywriting career. I enjoy it and it’s a good break. I’m eager to get away from the publicity trail and go back home, start typing again, and inhabiting another world.

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       Miss Lizzie review

       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of Walter Satterthwait's 1989 Lizzie Borden novel, Miss Lizzie.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



27 November 2022 - Sunday

Will Self Q & A | Classic recommendations

       Will Self Q & A

       At The Guardian Anthony Cummins has a Q & A with Will Self: ‘I’m seen as a still-walking dead white man’, as Self has a new book coming out, Why Read: Selected Writings 2001-2021.
       Self notes:
Until fairly recently, certainly since 2001, I probably wrote an average of 150,000 words of journalism every year, so there’s a vast amount to choose from.
       He also acknowledges:
With the possible exception of Umbrella, which lost the Booker to Hilary Mantel’s Bring Up the Bodies by a short nose, almost all my books have been Marmite.
       See also the publicity pages for Why Read from Grove and Grove Press UK.

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       Classic recommendations

       Antigone has now reached 250 articles published, and they have a nice piece celebrating that milestone, asking their writers and readers: "what their favourite Greek or Latin text is", in The Classic Classic ? Antigone Hits 250.
       Lots of good suggestions -- including Alexander Andrée's:
Frenetic, disgusting, and iconoclastic, Lucan’s Pharsalia has been a nail in the eye to Classicists of purist tastes. Mockingly dedicated to Nero and disguised in the tragedy of the Civil War between Caesar and Pompey, the amputated epic offers a twisted parody of Vergil’s Aeneid and the government it hails, the Principate. Through its morbid illustrations of power expressed in its most violent and perverted forms, Pharsalia works on every reader in the right mind as an effective inoculation against tyranny. A much neglected must-read.

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26 November 2022 - Saturday

Hans Magnus Enzensberger (1929-2022) | HWA Crown Awards | Ice review

       Hans Magnus Enzensberger (1929-2022)

       German author Hans Magnus Enzensberger -- who was awarded the leading German author prize, the Georg Büchner Prize, way back in 1963 -- has passed away; see, for example, the report by Heike Mund and Verena Greb at DeutscheWelle, German author Hans Magnus Enzensberger dies, or the notice from his German publisher, Suhrkamp.
       Several of his works -- though a very unrepresentative selection -- are under review at the complete review:        Seagull Books publish quite a few of his books in English translation.
       Enzensberger was also the co-founder and longtime publisher of the excellent Die Andere Bibliothek

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       HWA Crown Awards

       The Historical Writers' Association has announced the winners of this year's HWA Crown Awards, with the Gold Crown Award going to The Fortune Men, by Nadifa Mohamed.

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       Ice review

       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of Anna Kavan's 1967 classic, Ice.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



25 November 2022 - Friday

Warwick Prize | The Egg and I in the Czech Republic

       Warwick Prize

       They've announced the winners of this year's Warwick Prize for Women in Translation and there are two of them this year, Daisy Rockwell's translation of Geetanjali Shree's Tomb of Sand and Peter Graves' translation of Marit Kapla's Osebol; see also Sian Bayley's report in The Bookseller.

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       The Egg and I in the Czech Republic

       At Radio Prague International Ruth Fraňková reports on literary theorist Jiří Trávníček's new book, Betty a my, exploring: The Egg and I: Why is 1945 US bestseller topping Czech readers' lists ?
       The enduring popularity of Betty MacDonald's book -- Trávníček notes that repeated studies have found her to be: "the most popular and most read author in Czechia" -- is indeed something of a headscratcher. But it's apparently been the case for a while -- a phenomenon that even found mention in Philip Roth's The Prague Orgy, as noted in the piece.
       See also the Host publicity page for Trávníček's book -- and I hope we'll get to see this in English at some point; it sounds like a fascinating local-reading/publishing study.

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24 November 2022 - Thursday

Jan Michalski Prize | Prix de la littérature arabe
Irish Book Awards | PEN Presents winners

       Jan Michalski Prize

       They've announced the winner of this year's Jan Michalski Prize for Literature, a CHF 50,000 prize for a work of world literature, regardless of what language it is written in, and it is Les fossoyeuses, by Taina Tervonen.
       See also the French Publishers' Agency information page and the Éditions Marchialy publicity page.

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       Prix de la littérature arabe

       They've announced the winner of this year's prix de la littérature arabe, a leading fiction prize for a work by an Arab author written or translated into French, and it is Bel abîme, by Yamen Manaï; see, for example, the Livres Hebdo report.
       See also the elyzad publicity page.
       Manaï's The Ardent Swarm has been translated into English (get your copy at Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk), and we should be seeing this one In English too, eventually.

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       Irish Book Awards

       They've announced the winners of this year's An Post Irish Book Awards, with winners in eighteen categories (which include Bookshop of the Year).
       Trespasses Louise Kennedy was named Novel of the Year -- see also the publicity pages from Bloomsbury and Riverhead Books -- while EL, by Thaddeus Ó Buachalla, was named Irish Language Book of the Year -- see also the Coiscéim publicity page.

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       PEN Presents winners

       PEN Presents is a new English PEN award for sample translations from underrepresented languages and regions, and they've now announced the first batch of winners, six translators representing four of the languages of India.
       This sounds like a very promising prize -- and hopefully it will lead to complete and published translations.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



23 November 2022 - Wednesday

The NY Times' 100 Notable Books of 2022
Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize | Nights of Plague review

       The NY Times' 100 Notable Books of 2022

       The New York Times Book Review has announced their 100 Notable Books of 2022
       Unfortunately, they don't simply list the titles, but as best I can tell five of them are under review at the complete review:
(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



       Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize

       They've announced the winner of this year's Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction, and it is The Trees, by Percival Everett; see also Sian Bayley's report in The Bookseller.
       See also the publicity pages for The Trees from Graywolf Press and Influx Press, or get your copy at Amazon.com, Bookshop.org or Amazon.co.uk.

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       Nights of Plague review

       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk's latest novel, Nights of Plague.

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22 November 2022 - Tuesday

Österreichischer Buchpreis | John Dos Passos Prize finalists

       Österreichischer Buchpreis

       On Sunday they announced the Swiss Book Prize -- see my mention -- and then yesterday they announced the winner of this year's Austrian Book Prize, the leading Austrian fiction prize, and it is Mon Chéri und unsere demolierten Seelen, by Verena Roßbacher; see also the Kiepenheuer & Witsch foreign rights page.

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       John Dos Passos Prize finalists

       I missed this a few days ago, but they've announced the four finalists for this year's John Dos Passos Prize, awarded to: "an underappreciated writer whose work offers incisive, original commentary on American themes" (and which is: "the oldest literary award given by a Virginia college or university").
       The four finalists are: Bibliolepsy-author Gina Apostol, Carolina De Robertis, Jaime Manrique, and The Lost Time Accidents-author John Wray.
       The winner will be announced "in the coming weeks".

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



21 November 2022 - Monday

Schweizer Buchpreis | Tractatus Logico-Suicidalis review

       Schweizer Buchpreis

       They've announced (warning ! dreaded pdf format !) the winner of this year's Swiss Book Prize, and it is ... the winner of this year's German Book Prize, Blutbuch, by Kim de l'Horizon; see also the swiss.info report.
       See also the DuMont foreign rights page; unsurprisingly, English rights have already sold -- apparently to Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

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       Tractatus Logico-Suicidalis review

       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of Hermann Burger's manifesto On Killing Oneself, Tractatus Logico-Suicidalis.
       This is just (about) out from Wakefield Press -- yet another one of the remarkable titles they have brought out.
       The translation is by Adrian Nathan West, whose translation of Burger's Brenner came out, from Archipelago Books, earlier this year; see their publicity page; I should be getting to that too.

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20 November 2022 - Sunday

JCB Prize for Literature | Mori Ōgai meals

       JCB Prize for Literature

       They've announced the winner of this year's JCB Prize for Literature, a leading Indian fiction prize, and it is The Paradise of Food, by Khalid Jawed, translated from the Urdu by Baran Farooqi; see, for example, the Scroll.in report.
       Get your copy at Amazon.com, Flipkart, or Amazon.co.uk.

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       Mori Ōgai meals

       In The Asahi Shinbun Takashi Konishi reports that Literary giant Mori Ogai's favorite dishes recreated, served, as:
Now, a ryokan inn association in his hometown here is trying to capitalize on his fame by serving his favorite dishes recreated on the basis of recollections of his daughters and others close to the writer.
       Apparently: "They offer a tantalizing glimpse into his obsession with cleanliness" -- and:
While some dishes are suggestive of what today might be diagnosed as a compulsive cleanliness disorder, others are downright eccentric.
       The only one of his works under review at the complete review is The Wild Geese.

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19 November 2022 - Saturday

PEN/Heim Translation Fund Grants | Ann Goldstein Q & A

       PEN/Heim Translation Fund Grants

       PEN America has announced their 2023 literary grant winners for literary works-in-progress, including the PEN/Heim Translation Fund Grants; scroll down for the winning projects. They include translations from the Filipino, Swahili, Urdu, and Bulgarian, among other languages.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



       Ann Goldstein Q & A

       At Public Books Saskia Ziolkowski and host Aarthi Vadde have a Q & A with (Elena Ferrante-)translator Ann Goldstein; 'Translation is the closest way to read:'; you can listen to it, or read the transcript (warning ! dreaded pdf format !) .

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



18 November 2022 - Friday

Baillie Gifford Prize | Murakami 'By the Book' | Carnap reviews

       Baillie Gifford Prize

       They've announced the winner of this year's £50,000 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction, and it is Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne, by Katherine Rundell.
       See also the publicity pages from Farrar, Straus and Giroux and Faber, or get your copy at Amazon.com, Bookshop.org or Amazon.co.uk.

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       Murakami 'By the Book'

       This weekend's By the Book-column in The New York Times Book Review features the Novelist as a Vocation-author, in What Books Does Haruki Murakami Find Disappointing ? His Own.
       Among his responses:
While I’m writing a novel, I often translate fiction. It’s a nice change of pace, an excellent way to make a mental switch. Translating uses a different part of the brain from composing a novel, so it keeps one side of my brain from wearing out.
       And I can certainly appreciate this attitude:
You’re organizing a literary dinner party. Which three writers, dead or alive, do you invite ?

My apologies, but I’m not big on dinner parties.

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       Carnap reviews

       The most recent additions to the complete review are my reviews of the first two volumes of Rudolf Carnap's diaries:        These are both from the remarkable Meiner Verlag -- see, for example, Peter Laudenbach's profile in brand eins Kant kann warten.

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17 November 2022 - Thursday

National Book Awards | Governor General's Literary Awards
TLS Books of the Year

       National Book Awards

       The (American) National Book Foundation has announced the winners of this year's National Book Awards.
       The award for Translated Literature goes to Seven Empty Houses by Samanta Schweblin, translated by Megan McDowell; see also the Riverhead publicity page.
       The award for fiction goes to The Rabbit Hutch by Tess Gunty; see also the Knopf publicity page.
       I haven't seen either of these (or any of the other winners).

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       Governor General's Literary Awards

       They've announced the winners of this year's Governor General's Literary Awards, a leading Canadian literary prize.
       Winners were announced in each of seven categories in each of the two languages represented, French and English.
       The English-language fiction winner is Pure Colour by Sheila Heti; the French-language fiction winner is Mille secrets mille dangers by Alain Farah.

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       TLS Books of the Year

       The Times Literary Supplement has their: "contributors select their favourite books of 2022", in Books of the Year 2022, generally one of the more interesting of these kinds of list (though it seems disappointingly non-fiction-heavy this year).

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16 November 2022 - Wednesday

KLWave | Jenny Bhatt Q & A | Punishment of a Hunter review

       KLWave

       The Literature Translation Institute of Korea has announced a new online platform, KLWave, which includes a database of some 1,088 authors, 4,735 book titles, and 39 translators.
       See also Park Ga-young's report in The Korea Herald on how New online platform KLWave aims to lead literature's Hallyu.

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       Jenny Bhatt Q & A

       In The Dallas Morning News Joyce Sáenz Harris has a Q & A with the translator of Dhumketu's The Shehnai Virtuoso, Jenny Bhatt, in This Dallas author is shining a light on Desi authors from around the globe.
       Among her responses:
The New York Times has a series called “Read Your Way Around the World.” How significant is it that American journalism is becoming more open to international literature ?

I love that series. That said, I check it regularly and see barely a couple of South Asian works featured and they’re typically from languages at the top of the South Asian translation pyramid: Bangla, Hindi, Urdu, Tamil, etc. For robust international literature coverage, we need to look to, again, independent venues like Words Without Borders, World Literature Today, Asymptote Journal and, of course, Desi Books.

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       Punishment of a Hunter review

       The most recent addition to the complete review is my review of A Leningrad Confidential by Yulia Yakovleva, Punishment of a Hunter, the first in the series.

       Crime fiction has exploded in Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union, but relatively little beyond Boris Akunin has been translated into English so I was curious about this. A second instalment in the series is due out next year.

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15 November 2022 - Tuesday

Warwick Prize shortlist | Time's 100 Must-Read Books of 2022
Prix du Meilleur livre étranger

       Warwick Prize shortlist

       They've announced the shortlist for this year's Warwick Prize for Women in Translation.
       Two of the seven titles remaining in the running are under review at the complete review -- Karen Van Dyck's translation of Margarita Liberaki's Three Summers and Daisy Rockwell's translation of Geetanjali Shree's Tomb of Sand.
       The winner will be announced on 24 November.

       (And don't forget that this prize admirably reveals all the books (warning ! dreaded pdf format !) that were considered for the prize -- like every literary prize should.)

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       Time's 100 Must-Read Books of 2022

       Yet another very early best-of-the-year list, as Time has released its list of The 100 Must-Read Books of 2022.
       (I've read and reviewed all of four of these .....)

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       Prix du Meilleur livre étranger

       They've announced the winners of this year's prix du Meilleur livre étranger, a leading French foreign book prize, with Juan Gabriel Vásquez's Retrospective winning in the novel category, and Maria Stepanova's In Memory of Memory winning in the non-fiction category; see also the Livres Hebdo report.

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14 November 2022 - Monday

Jon Fosse Q & A | Boekenbon Literatuurprijs

       Jon Fosse Q & A

       At The New Yorker Merve Emre has a Q & A with the author, in Jon Fosse's Search for Peace.
       Lots of interesting stuff here -- including the news that Fosse is translating Gerald Murnane's The Plains into Norwegian (and that he has previously translated Kafka and Trakl).
       I fully agree with Emre's wish, that: "more novelists would work as translators" -- but, of course, many of them do, outside the English-speaking world. (In the US/UK ... not so much.) In any case it's good to see that Fosse does this as well -- and that he recognizes:
I really like to translate. It's like reading, in a way, but you get very deep. It's very deep reading.
       Embarrassingly, I haven't gotten to his Septology yet (I don't have the full set ...), but several Fosse-works are under review at the complete review, e.g. Scenes from a Childhood.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



       Boekenbon Literatuurprijs

       They've announced the winner of this year's Boekenbon Literature Prize, the leading Dutch book prize (which you might remember from its days as the AKO Literatuurprijs), and it is Het lied van ooievaar en dromedaris, by Anjet Daanje; see also the Uitgeverij Passage publicity page and the Dutch Foundation for Literature information page.
       This is another prize that does it right: they publish a list of all the titles entered (warning ! dreaded pdf format !) and hence in the running for the prize -- something that all literary prizes should do. They considered 565 titles -- remember that, too, next time the Booker Prize judges yammer about how many books they have to consider .....

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



13 November 2022 - Sunday

Boye's Crisis | John Banville Q & A

       Boye's Crisis

       Karin Boye's most famous novel is Kallocain, but recently my review of her Crisis has been among the most popular at the site.
       Only now have I learned why: apparently the book gets mentioned in something called 'Young Royals', which can be seen on Netflix; with McKinley Franklin explaining that The Book Featured In ‘Young Royals’ Season 2 Has So Many Parallels With The Show at Her Campus.
       Hey, whatever the reason, it's great to see the book get some attention -- and I hope it helps Norvik Press, who published this, shift a few more copies.

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



       John Banville Q & A

       At The Guardian Anthony Cummins has a Q & A with John Banville: ‘There’s been a creeping retreat into infantilism’.
       But sad to hear:
I’m an old man and I don’t read much fiction; whatever fiction gives you, I don’t seem to need it any more.
       I can't imagine ever reaching that point ......

(Posted by: M.A.Orthofer)    - permanent link -



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