Tag Archives: Best of Lists

What are the must-read lists made of?

What are the must-read lists made of?

This article by John Crace in the Guardian, Wednesday 28 December has given me a giggle today so I thought I’d copy it wholus bolus for you all to read.

 The 2011 book lists digested. What are the must-read lists made of?

Here’s our ultimate guide

 1 The novel that would have won the Booker prize if the fools in charge had given me the job rather than that lightweight Stella Rimington.

2 The King James’s Bible. The most compelling piece of poetry in the English language. Not that I’ve read it. Or intend to.

3 The “luminous” first novel of one of the students on my creative writing course.

4 The truly wonderful novel by my good friend that was unaccountably left off every literary prize long-list.

5 The new collection of poems and fragments from D’Erek, the authentic black voice of the underclass and the dispossessed.

6 The book that finally makes sense of string theory and shows you how to use quantum physics to get a haircut like Brian Cox.

7 The heartbreaking biography of a previously unknown major war poet who was killed on the first day of the battle of the Somme having just completed the first verse of his only poem.

8 The paperback edition of the thought-provoking novel by one of my best friends that was published in hardback last year. I know this doesn’t strictly count but he doesn’t have anything else out this year and it’s the only way I can squeeze him in.

9 The shocking deconstruction of modern culture that revealed D’Erek was in fact a white Oxford graduate.

10 The 37-page novella about a man who doesn’t have much to say that felt as rich and satisfying as many 400-page full-length novels.

11 The book whose title I can’t quite remember by an author who once gave me a jacket quote.

12 The brilliantly conceived historical novel that re-imagines the Tudor court of Henry VIII from the point of view of the man who was employed to wipe his arse.

13 Chick-lit often deservedly gets a bad press, but this novel is an exception – principally because I met the author at a publishing do and she’s well fit.

14 The richly satisfying work of modern counter-factualism that examines how Britain would now look if the M25 had never been built.

15 The provocative and groundbreaking insight into Lady Gaga buying her own drinks in a German nightclub that has reclaimed feminism for the 21st century.

16 The brilliantly researched history of the slipper in the Victorian novel by the lead fiction reviewer of the TLS who, I hope, will review my new book favourably next spring.

17 The compelling satire about a phone hacker who goes mad after listening to his own messages by mistake.

18 The astonishing work of literary scholarship that proved Martin Amis was actually only the second-greatest novelist who has ever lived.

19 The masterful novel by the author who promised to nominate my book in return.

20 The brave and heart-lifting account of the Chinese woman who spent 10 years working in a Nike sweatshop before coming out as a lesbian.

21 The utterly forgettable book by the author whose kids go to the same school in Islington as mine.

22 The disturbing first novel about a teenage rioter by a writer who perfectly captures the authentic voice of Huddersfield.

23 The book of counterintuitive cod psychology by an American with a silly haircut that proves if you say something persuasively enough you can end up on a Christmas booklist.

24 The riotous rewriting of The Dead Sea Scrolls in iambic pentameter by the country’s greatest living poet.

25 The stunning, transcendent new translation into Swedish of Pascal’s Pensées.

26 The collected journalism of an old hack who is well past his sell-by date and hasn’t written anything interesting for years but goes to dinner parties with the director of a publishing company.

27 The autobiography of the Higgs Boson particle that is both a savage indictment of Europe in the aftermath of the financial meltdown and a searching, provocative account of our relationship with God.

28 My book, Vertigo: One Football Fan’s Fear of Success. I can’t recommend it highly enough.

Some random lists

Some random lists

It’s been a busy few days in the bloggysphere and rather than do multiple posts I thought I’d bring a whole lot of lists together.

Paul Murray’s Top 10 Wicked Clerics – just for a bit of fun

Wikipedia’s List of Best Selling Fiction Authors – your favourite there?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_books

5 Real Librarians talk about their favourite Fictional Librarians – Brendan whats-his-name is my fave! And yours?

List of cliches used by book reviewers so you can play Book Review Bingo

Heidi

Good books gone bad

Good books gone bad

Here’s a lovely post from the Guardian in response to the American Book Review’s Top 40 Bad Books list.
I’m pleased, and relieved, to find mentioned in that post, and the others to which it makes links, several books that I’ve tried and not got anywhere with (Revolutionary Road and The Great Gatsby being two recent culprits).
Heidi

The Favourite Australian Novel of All Time

The Favourite Australian Novel of All Time

Last year the Australian Book Review conducting a poll to find the Favourite Australian novel of all time. Well, now the results are out and the winner was Cloudstreet by Tim Winton.

‘A perennial favourite since its publication in 1991, [Cloudstreet] was the overwhelming favourite-by a margin of three to one to its nearest rival, Henry Handel Richardson’s The Fortunes of Richard Mahony, which was closely followed by Patrick White’s Voss and Winton’s most recent novel, Breath,’ said ABR editor Peter Rose. Rose said the poll had received thousands of votes for almost 300 novels.

The top 20 novels in the poll are:
  1. Cloudstreet by Tim Winton
  2. The fortunes of Richard Mahony by Henry Handel Richardson
  3. Voss by Patrick White
  4. Breath by Tim Winton
  5. Oscar and Lucinda by Peter Carey
  6. My brother Jack by George Johnston
  7. The secret river by Kate Grenville
  8. Eucalyptus by Murray Bail
  9. The man who loved children by Christina Stead
  10. The tree of man by Patrick White
  11. My brilliant career by Miles Franklin
  12. Monkey grip by Helen Garner
  13. Dirt music by Tim Winton
  14. The vivisector by Patrick White (also nominated for the Lost Booker Prize)
  15. Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay
  16. Remembering Babylon by David Malouf
  17. For the term of his natural life by Marcus Clarke
  18. The merry-go-round in the sea by Randolph Stow
  19. Carpentaria by Alexis Wright
  20. The slap by Christos Tsiolkas
A list of all 290 nominated titles can be found on the ABR website.

Who’s made a motza outta books in the naugties?

Who’s made a motza outta books in the naugties?

JK Rowling! She’s WAY out in front of the pack. Old JK has sold more than double the number of books of her nearest rival, Roger Hargreaves (The Mr Men author) and made almost 8 1/2 times more money than him. Here are the top ten authors by books sold and with the GB Pound value of those sales :

Top 10 Author Books Sold (Value)
1 JK Rowling 29,084,999 (£225.9m)
2 Roger Hargreaves 14,163,141 (£26.6m)
3 Dan Brown 13,372,007 (£74.1m)
4 Jacqueline Wilson 12,673,148 (£69.9m)
5 Terry Pratchett 10,455,397 (£77.2m)
6 John Grisham 9,862,998 (£65.9m)
7 Richard Parsons 9,561,776 (£49.2m)
8 Danielle Steel 9,119,149 (£51m)
9 James Patterson 8,172,647 (£53.8m)
10 Enid Blyton 7,910,758 (£31.2m)

See here for the full Guardian article with the Top 100 authors. Note that children’s authors are thick in the top 20 or so – anyone got a good kids book in them?

Goodreading magazine’s top titles of 2009

Goodreading magazine’s top titles of 2009

 


Best of 09
The magasine has put together a list of our best reviewed books of 2009 across all genres. This is just a sample below. To see the entire list log into our December / January magazine.
 
general fiction
One Morning Like a Bird – Andrew Miller
The Elegance of the Hedgehod - Muriel Barbery
A Mercy - Toni Morrison

Ransom – David Malouf 
 
crime
Buried - Mark Billingham  
Blood Line – Mark Billingham
The Complaints – Ian Rankin

general non-fiction
Churchill and Australia - Graham Freudenburg
The Dreaming and Other Essays – W E H Stanner

The Thirty-Six - Siegmund Siegreich

ABC 702′s Summer Reading List

ABC 702′s Summer Reading List

Each month 702 Mornings host gets together with literary critic, Geordie Williamson for their on-the-radio book club. Geordie has come up with 10 reads to get you through the summer holidays. You can read a precis of each book and listen to Geordie’s talking about each title by clicking here.

The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver (the Library has this title on order at time of posting)
Outside Of A Dog by Rick Gekoski (the Library has this title on order at time of posting)
The Museum Of Innocence by Orhan Pamuk
Love and Summer by William Trevor (the Library has this title on order at time of posting)
The Good Parents by Joan London
Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi by Geoff Dyer
The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan
Ransom by David Malouf
Life and Fate by Vassily Grossman
The Atmospheric Railway by Shena Mackay

And if you want to see the books discussed by the 702 Book Club you can click here – once in there you just click on each title for a plot outline, picture and the full interview.