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The Man Booker Long List 2018 is Here

By July 24, 2018Literary Awards, News

It’s that time of the year, when the long list for one of the most prestigious literary prizes in literature is here. It’s time for the Man Booker long list 2018 and it’s already come under much praise and criticism.

On Twitter, criticism has already been laid for the lack of diversity in authors in the list, something that seems to be becoming a bit of a regular occurrence for many of the bigger literary prizes. However, the list has also been praised for including a graphic novel for the first time in the prize’s history.

Anyway, it’s the list you’re waiting for so without further ado, here it is along with the thoughts from the Man Booker judges.

Belinda Bauer – Snap

“An acute, stylish, intelligent novel about how we survive trauma. Expertly paced, Snap offers a beautiful evocation of the lives of children, and how they perceive and manage tragedy.”

Snap US
Snap UK

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Anna Burns – Milkman

“At the intersection of class, race, gender and sexual violence, it deals with oppression and power with a Beckettian sense of humour, offering a wholly original take on Ireland in the time of the Troubles through the mind of a young girl.”

Milkman US
Milkman UK

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Nick Drnaso – Sabrina

“Oblique, subtle, minimal, unmanipulative: the style of the pictures is the book’s worldview. Drnaso uses images to express an idea about what’s invisible – an idea about uncertainty, and the different kinds of holes that missing people leave in our lives.”

Sabrina US
Sabrina UK

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Esi Edugyan – Washington Black

“A dazzling exploration of race in the Atlantic world, which also manages to be a yarn and a chase story. It manages to keep you on the edge of your seat, while making you, as a reader, want to savour every moment.”

Washington Black US
Washington Black UK

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Guy Gunaratne – In Our Mad and Furious City

“An ambitious mosaic of virtuosic ventriloquism, Guy Gunaratne’s book is an inner city novel for our times, exploring the endurance of social trauma across generations, and conveying the agony and energy of the marginalised, the outsider, and the oppressed.”

In Our Mad and Furious City US
In Our Mad and Furious City UK

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Daisy Johnson – Everything Under

“A hypnotic, mythic, unexpected story from a beguiling new voice. Everything Under is an exploration of family, gender, the ways we understand each other and the hands we hold out to each other – a story that’s like the waterways at its heart.”

Everything Under US
Everything Under UK

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Rachel Kushner – The Mars Room

“A novel about gender, class and the absolute corruption of the American dream, The Mars Room explores the meaning of incarceration in our moment. It feels terrifyingly authentic.”

The Mars Room US
The Mars Room UK

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Sophie Mackintosh – The Water Cure

“This chilling, beautifully written novel explores the ways in which extreme parental protection can fail, and unpicks patriarchy at its core, forcing us to ask what it means to survive, indeed whether it is possible to survive, in a man’s world.”

The Water Cure US
The Water Cure UK

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Michael Ondaatje – Warlight

“Wonderfully atmospheric, beautifully paced, subtle storytelling. Warlight contains an incredible array of characters through whom Ondaatje tells the hidden, barely spoken, tale of war, especially as it impacts on children.”

Warlight US
Warlight UK

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Richard Powers – The Overstory

“An ecological epic, a novel of ideas, The Overstory begins with five apparently distinct narratives and then binds them into a compelling network of connections.”

Overstory US
Overstory UK

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Robin Robertson – The Long Take

“A book about a man and a city in shock, it’s an extraordinary evocation of the debris and the ongoing destruction of war even in times of peace., Robin Robertson shows the flexibility a poet can bring to form and style.”

The Long Take US
The Long Take UK

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Sally Rooney – Normal People

“A very intimate character study of two young people trying to figure out how to love each other, Normal People is written in compressed, composed, allusive prose that invites you read behind the lines”

Normal People US
Normal People UK

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Donal Ryan – From A Low and Quiet Sea

“A deft, unshowy novel about manhood and momentous contingency, it evokes the way in which real lives unfold and wrap around each other.”

From a Low and Quiet Sea US
From a Low and Quiet Sea UK

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So that’s the entire longlist, have you read any yet? If you have please consider sending us a review. The shortlist will be announced on September 20th and we’ll bring you that as soon as it’s announced, then the winner will be declared on October 16th!



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