Tournament of Books discussion
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2013 Books
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Round One and the Play-in
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Mar 07, 2013 06:54AM
I got things started off right by selecting the right war novel in the play-in round, but just lost my champion in the first round! I'm actually pretty pleased!
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you know...when i made my picks, i didn't give a whole lot of weight to my choices based on the judges. this morning, before the result of the fault in our stars v. the round house , i thought, 'hunh! I bet lepucki goes with green'. DOH! probably should have thought about my picks just a bit more, eh? i had erdrich's novel going to the finals but i do have green's as a zombie pick...so...i guess we'll see what happens.
i really enjoyed the arguments made by lepucki and the commentary from kevin and john! i am not really a YA reader at all, but every now and then i will give one a try if i am thinking of giving a book to my 15yo niece. the fault in our stars happened to be one i did recently read and i loved it so much. it gave me hope for the YA market but i didn't have faith in it for this competition. i liked the john hughes comparison john made.



I did enjoy this critique better than the "play in" round, which I found to be a bit mean-spirited and off putting.




Topher, I'm just curious - what about the Play-In critique did you find mean-spirited/off-putting?
I just read the essay that John Warner mentioned in yesterday's commentary (http://slate.me/OvmDVo) and so it's got me thinking about people's reactions to harsh(er) online criticism. I, for one, am all for it, but I'm curious to see what bothered you on this particular one.

Topher, I'm just curious - what about the Play-In critique did y..."
In general, I'm all in favor of negative criticism. However, something about the ToB (to me) is its light-heartedness. If I'm reading a review in LRB or The Times, I would have no problem with a rough critique. The ToB has been about a love of reading, fun, and the absurdity of book "competitions"(although i've noticed that has changed a bit over the last couple years). So, it wasn't so much the negativity itself that bothered me, but where it is. On the other hand, I read the Slate article and greatly agree with its premise.
I also wish that ToB, if they're going to have 3 war novels competing together, wouldn't have chosen a military man to judge them. There's too much personal prejudice ("Here’s the problem: I’m that “road meat.” My soldiers were that “road meat.” Um, ok.), which is understandable, but just not for me.
That said, I really liked Billy Flynn, and am happy it moved on.

I did love May We Be Forgiven (which based on the comments it appears people either love or hate). I liked Billy Lynn's but was happy to see MWBF move on. I read 14 of the tournament books and it was, unexpectedly, one of my favorites.
I am still sad Dear Life didn't win. Building Stories is one of the four I didn't get to so I'm trying to be fair but Dear Life was just so good.



If it beats Bring Up the Bodies, I might swoon like a character in a 19th-century novel.

I still don't think I'll read Heti.

Saeed Jones just broke the tournament!


It really has become The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake of this year's tournament.
If it takes down Gone Girl, the Internet might explode.


I haven't had much to say about this year's tournament as have had no/very little quibbles with the results (plus one of my favorite phrases: "the anticipation of an event is often greater than the event itself") -- but Mantel is almost in a league of her own, so perhaps it's a fairer fight for the remaining entries to duke it out.
My ToB obsession makes me want to give HSaPB a shot as it's the only book missing from my 'read' list from the quarterfinals on, but...

Exactly! I've been wondering if we are all in some kind of demented reality TV show (without the TV part) where the stage is set in advance to elicit the most shocking response. Ha!
I certainly hope not, and although I am not pleased with the outcome of today's match up, if Judge Jones truly believed in the merits of HSaPB and didn't love BuTB, then I can respect that. Even though it's so wrong. So wrong.

That said, so far in this year's TOB pretty much every book I read has been eliminated and when two books I read were against each other the judge chose differently than I would have, so maybe I'm just being petty.
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