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All That Man Is
2016 Longlist [MBP]
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All That Man Is by David Szalay
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Maxwell
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Jul 27, 2016 07:55AM

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it's my favourite time in my reading year!



The book is more a collection of short stories than a novel arranged chronologically so as to offer a picture of the inner lives of a collection of nine men, from seventeen to seventy-three, as they experience ageing. The thread that brings all of the stories together is their need to believe that life has purpose. . . more than just the search fo r love and money. Each story has approximately forty pages and is independent of the others. Normally not fond of short stories but this one worked for me. Characters well drawn and believable, intelligent use of language (used the dictionary a lot) and enjoyed all the intercontinental travel. I did spend more time on this than any others partly because it was longer but also to be able to really enjoy I created a character list. I liked it very much.

I actually do see each story as a 'chapter' of..."
Anya, I think I pretty much agree with your ranking of the stories, except that I didn't get on with #2. That's why I had a shaky start with the book - stories 1 and 2 were my least favourite, but after that it really grew on me and, like you, I thought the final two stories were the best two.
(I normally produce my own ranking of the long list books, but I wasn't expecting to be ranking the chapters within the books!)



So good to hear - helps to motivate myself to pick this book up again. (But in anyway I am a completist, I even pushed through Serious Sweet and I still do not know why I did that to myself.)

David Szalay (Canada-UK) - All That Man Is (Jonathan Cape)
“Szalay has written a kaleidoscopic novel about the state of masculinity and the state of contemporary Europe. It’s wry, witty and deeply accomplished.”
Foreman: I think what the judges thought was remarkable was how this is a book for right now and post-Brexit Europe, and it speaks to that condition of coming together and also fragmentation and really tries to imagine what it means to be a part of a larger European existence. It’s a very moving book, and it has a multiplicity of strands and stories that are all linked together very, very cleverly and subtly.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03rw8kq
I still haven't started with this one. That is, I have read a couple of paged (maybe 10) and at the moment I just can't bring myself to read on. Maybe next week...



1.The Rich Russian
2. Mr. Useless goes to Cyprus
3. The 73 year old Italian
4. The Bodyguard
5. The Professor
6. The Journalist
7. The Guy who lives in Croatia
8.The kids touring Europe
9. The guy who owns apartments
Not shortlist material imo



In the end I just do not know what the point of the book is. Not only is the scope of stories very limited (especially measured against the book's title) but I also I thought many of the protagonist were quite clichéd. There was nothing new. Nothing which made me think.


Thanks - I found that very helpful. Although his arguments as to why it is a novel are completely unconvincing!
So this technically should not have been eligible, but given it's on the shortlist I actually felt it was one of the stronger books.
The title All That Man Is does beg the response that there is a lot more to men than this. But I think he meant something different - more than the characters realise that this is all their life is going to amount to. The lack of variety in them seems to be deliberate, and indeed a reason he claims it is a novel (essentially the same underlying type of man but in a different setting).
I do think his original title of Europa would have been better, and there is a strong political angle given how much the freedom of movement in Europe, of which all of the characters take advantage, is under threat post Brexit and the rise of nationalist parties elsewhere.
And the link with The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914 at the end - a book that posits a crisis in European masculinity may even have caused The Great War - is a nice way to end.

I have really enjoyed reading other reader's musings on this book in this thread - so much so I joined the group to add this comment. Thanks all.
The question of whether a series can ever amount to a novel is an interesting one....
The themes: time, ageing, purpose, life in an increasingly globalised Europe, mindfulness, and probably others I've yet to spot, all thematically link the stories. There is also something approaching a dramatic arc given that story one is about teenagers and the final story is about old age. In a sense the aggregate effect is of an adult life.
Is that sufficient for All That Man Is to qualify as a novel? The Booker judges must think so and, I think, overall I am happy for it to be included, not least because I think it's wonderful.

Having just finished another ManBooker nominee, 'Eileen' I was feeling thoroughly depressed.
Although the individual stories in 'All That Man Is' are fairly downbeat the overall effect seemed strangely uplifting - the shared passage of time and human experience...
I think it would be a worthy contender for the title.
My review here: www.goodreads.com/review/show/1758568...

Books mentioned in this topic
All That Man Is (other topics)London and the South-East (other topics)
The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914 (other topics)