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February Group Read (2016)- Nominations [CLOSED]


I loved How To Be Both, but it didn't win, so I can't second it. I'll save my seconds until I see a few more nominations.
Toby wrote: "I nominate How To Be Both by Ali Smith from the 2013 longlist"
Hi Toby, we are currently only nominating and reading past winners. Once that list is exhausted (a long time from now), then we will turn to longlist/shortlist nominees.
Hi Toby, we are currently only nominating and reading past winners. Once that list is exhausted (a long time from now), then we will turn to longlist/shortlist nominees.

My seconds are: Wolf Hall and A Brief History of Seven Killings

I second Nina's nomination- The Narrow Road to the Deep North; and Karen's -The Inheritance of Loss.
I nominate Offshore by Penelope Fitzgerald (winner in 1979). And I second The Finkler Question and The Inheritance of Loss.

I second The Bone People and The Narrow Road to the Deep North.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Narrow Road to the Deep North (other topics)The Luminaries (other topics)
Disgrace (other topics)
The Narrow Road to the Deep North (other topics)
The Sea (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Richard Flanagan (other topics)John Banville (other topics)
Richard Flanagan (other topics)
Penelope Fitzgerald (other topics)
Anne Enright (other topics)
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Just as a reminder, the 2016 Man Booker International Prize longlist will be announced in March, which means this group will be returning back to focusing on those nominees as opposed to a backlist winner of the MBP. I think it's too much to ask everyone to do both, so as planned when this group was created, we will spend March, April and May reading from the longlist for the international prize.
Then in June we will return to reading our backlist before July when the regular Man Booker Prize longlist is announced.
BUT, let's focus on February :)
As usual, you are able to nominate 1 book (must be a Man Booker winner) and second any 2 books that others nominate.
For reference, we have already read:
The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood
The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst
So please don't nominate those, or you are wasting your vote.
I'll start the nominees by recommending The Finkler Question by Howard Jacobson, which was the 2010 winner.