Tournament of Books discussion
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2017 TOB - General
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2017 Shortlist
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AmberBug
(last edited Jan 12, 2017 09:14AM)
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Jan 12, 2017 07:03AM

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So sports play-in is: Throwback, Sudden Death, Sport of Kings?
Oh, e-book-wise Charlie Freeman available for $1.99, looks like everything else "full" price.
Happy Reading!


The Throwback Special by Chris Bachelder
The Mothers by Brit Bennett
Moonglow by Michael Chabon
Sudden Death by Alvaro Enrigue
We Love You, Charlie Freeman by Kaitlyn Greenidge
Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi
The Nix by Nathan Hill
The Vegetarian by Han Kang
High Dive by Jonathan Lee
Sweet Lamb of Heaven by Lydia Millet
The Sport of Kings by C. E. Morgan
Version Control by Dexter Palmer
Grief is the Thing with Feathers by Max Porter
Mister Monkey by Francine Prose
My Name is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout
Black Wave by Michelle Tea
The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
& brackets here: http://www.themorningnews.org/p/here-...



Thank you Ed! I grabbed that one.
Like you, this was a terrible reading year for me and because of that I have read ZERO.

I have question, I never had any interest in reading Charlie Freedman as the premise sounded similar to We are all Completely Beside Ourselves, which I didn't love. Is it similar or comletely different, just both have families living with chimps?
Also, I'll never learn, The ones I read from the long list never make the short list. How can Association of small bombs not be there. I just finished it and loved it.

the shortlist has convinced me to finally shell out for Moonglow. But I'll probably grab Version Control, Sudden Death and the Nix given all the love in this group for those two and (hoped-for) shortlist discounts at Powells! Meanwhile I'm surprised to have already read 5 and half-read another 5. I've been hogging my library's copy of Sudden Death for the last six months because no one in my district seems to know about it but I suspect I won't be able to continue to renewals now.


I though Charlie Freeman was very different than WAACBO, I read both liked both but like Charlie Freeman more.
Now I need to prioritize all the ones I haven't read, a few of which weren't really on my radar at all


I have question, I never had any interest in reading Charlie Freedman as the premise sounded similar to We are all Completely Beside Ourselves, which I didn't love. Is it similar or coml..."
I felt like they were very different in writing style, tone, and theme.

Oh. Now I see. A 3-book play in on a subject in which I have no interest. Ok.



Susanw, I had the same concern you did, and I agree with Katie here. Charlie's author did a wonderful job of NOT developing the plot in expected ways...every time I thought I knew what would happen next, she surprised me, and I loved that. I wouldn't have predicted this would be in the tournament, but I'm glad it is.

I'm guessing Sudden Death.


I think I'll buy* Moonglow because the waitlist at the library is extreme. And maybe buy* Black Wave because I like supporting queer authors whenever possible, and really like Michelle Tea.
*Buying through the ToB spreadsheet so TMN gets the cut! :)
I'm so glad the shortlist is finally here!!!

The nix 628 MCL
Sport of kings 560 MCL
Version control 495 MCL
Moonglow 430 MCL
We love you, Charlie Freeman 336 MCL
High dive 336 MCL
All the birds in the sky 320 MCL
The Underground Railroad 306 MCL
Homegoing 305 MCL
Mister Monkey 304 MCL
The Mothers 278 MCL
Sudden death 272 MCL
Sweet lamb of heaven 256 MCL
Throwback special 213 MCL
My name is Lucy Barton 193 MCL
The vegetarian 192 MCL
Black wave 176 MCL
Grief is the thing with feathers 114 MCL


I've read 8, which is a super high number for me (hurrah) - but before today only 2 others were on my library hold list.
Much clicking and searching must now happen!
(Of my 8, Homegoing <-my zombie pick and The Vegetarian are my favorites.)

Has anyone read the The Sport of Kings who wasn't really grabbed by the premise of the book but ended up loving it?

An interesting list, made more interesting by the length of the list they came from. Glad I can return After the Fall to the library unread and get started on the list!

I hate sports, but since I loved that one, and the other two sound kind of interesting (especially Throwback Special)... maybe I like reading about sports?
Or maybe I'm going to have an existential crisis about who I am because now I'm thinking about how Friday Night Lights is one of my favorite all-time shows, and how much I look forward to the ToB as a literary bloodsport. So....


Thank You Ed -
Charlie Freeman in now on my Kindle. I've on read (1) so work to be done.


hey amanda!! I went through my library's overdrive audio (my favorite way to do books on tape!) and available was The Mothers, Moonglow, The Nix, The Vegetarian and my name is Lucy Barton (we just moved so I have access to both my town in Indiana and Philadelphia library. They were available in audio at booth so I'm assuming it will be other places). I've had to waitlist a few but a surprising variety was available. I know it doesn't **strictly** answer your question but I'm always down for audiobooks that are free and easy.

Another indication that this year is short on oddballs, as C just said over on the Long List thread.


So tell us, Ehrrin, how did you Really Feel about Billy Linn's Long Halftime Walk? Haha!


- I'm not really dreading any of the books when in the past I've been happy to avoid some of the books.
- I'm so happy the inclusion of The Underground Railroad didn't prevent the similarly themed Homegoing from making the cut. I prefer the latter.
- My favorite read of last year made it. Hooray for The Nix, which turns the WMFN on its head. Also surprised and thrilled to see All the Birds in the Sky.
- Lots of chimps up in here.
- Early pick for the win: Moonglow. Why? People seem to love it, but I very much did not.

Charlie Freeman is also good on audio.

I have question, I never had any interest in reading Charlie Freedman as the premise sounded similar to We are all Completely Beside Ourselves, which I didn't love. Is it similar or coml..."
I'm finding it very different. It has a lot of racial and science themes, and it would be a fantastic matchup for The Underground Railroad. I'm about 50 pages from the end and can't wait to see what happens.

Wow, I think there are a lot of oddballs! In a good way. A lot of crossover/almost genre picks where the story is a bit madcap and not very serious in comparison with others they might have picked. A lot of gentle-to-read, quirky picks imo--All the Birds in the Sky, We Love You, Charlie Freeman, Mister Monkey, The Throwback Special, Version Control, Black Wave

I DNF one on the shortlist
Of the 9 I have to read - there are 2 that I might not read - so definitely will be the last if I decide to read.


Hated the Nix, so hoping a quick exit.
Moonglow was good, but Chabon has enough love, doesn't need a Rooster.

Wow, I think there are a lot of oddballs! In a good way. A lot of crossover/almost genre picks where the story is a bit madcap a..."
Haha, one man's oddballs is another man's mainstream. Or woman's. :-)
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Books mentioned in this topic
Version Control (other topics)The Kindness of Enemies (other topics)
My Name Is Lucy Barton (other topics)
The Vegetarian (other topics)
My Name Is Lucy Barton (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Michael Chabon (other topics)Yaa Gyasi (other topics)
Charlie Jane Anders (other topics)
Chris Bachelder (other topics)
Brit Bennett (other topics)
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