Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2020
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39. A book by an author whose real name(s) you're not quite sure how to pronounce

I found this site to help with pronunciation:
https://www.rightpronunciation.com/la...





LOL that’s me!!! I’m not clicking on any of those interesting links until AFTER I’ve read my book! I’m not even saying what the book is until I’m done, because I don’t want to risk a well-meaning reader telling me how to pronounce the name!

Åsne Seierstad As-knee, Ahs-knee, As-nuh, Ahs-nuh...help!
Diane Freund Froond, Free-und?
Christophe Dufossé Duh-foss-eh, Doofossie?
Suhayl Saadi Sue-ale, Su-hale?
Sara Gruen Groon, Groo-en?
Oh the shame...

Well I know how to pronounce Åsne Seierstad, and I have a good idea of Diane Freund (if she is German).
I can tell you it´s not an A sound in Åsne, Sarah, it´s an Å... Somewhat close to the sound you say when you go "oh!" but not quite.
I am still uncertain how to pronounce a name as easy as Riordan. Is it like "riot" Riordan or Reeordan???

Haha, I'm still struggling with Asne!
Riordan is like Rye-or-dun, but the Rye-or is more like one syllable. Like fire but ryor...if that makes sense!

Yeah, that´s what I thought: I´ve been saying it wrong for years. Remember I am a children´s librarian so I get to say his name quite a lot. The kids are almost all Danish, so they don´t know better :) It was actually an Indian expat child who pronounced it correctly, who clued me in that I might have said it wrong all along...
If you want to know how Åsne is pronounced click here: https://da.forvo.com/word/%C3%A5sne/
edit: press the triangle next to "udtale" (means pronunciation)
It doesn´t answer how you pronounce Seierstad so you can still be in doubt and use her ;)

For my week I'll probably choose from the below:
The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri
Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China by Jung Chang
The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee
The Bhagavad Gita by Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa
Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng

I'll choose from these:
The Winter Queen - Boris Akunin
Disgrace - J.M. Coetzee
Freshwater - Akwaeke Emezi
Thirteen Guests - J. Jefferson Farjeon
The Tea Lords - Hella Haasse 341p
Flights - Olga Tokarczuk

Here are some others I've come up with:
My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite
My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh
Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
The Perfect Nanny by Leïla Slimani
Oraefi: The Wasteland by Ófeigur Sigurðsson
The Man Who Died by Antti Tuomainen
The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides
Washington Black by Esi Edugyan
Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk


Masaji Ishikawa.
His book is:
A River in Darkness: One Man's Escape from North Korea

I forget who I picked for this category... I had a few. I know one was Greg Iles.....how do you say that? I- less?..... Isles?.....Ill-es??? I dont know.
Edit to say I'm using All the Names They Used for God by Anjali Sachdeva is it "ch" or "k" and long e or short e in the last name and where is the emphasis on all the syllables ???



Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets, & Advice for Living Your Best Life by
2. Have you read the author before? No is her first book.
3. Where is the author from? She is from United States

Anjali = UN-J-LEE:
UN as in 'UNdo' or 'UNder'
J as in 'Junk' (just a short JUH sound)
LEE
Sachdeva = SUCH - DAY - VAH (rhymes with Bah)
I hope that helps. I don't know even a bit of the IPA to be able to do this the right way, unfortunately.

The book was very meh.



Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
2. Have you read the author before?
Yes. She's terrific!
3. Where is the author from?
Nigeria

Anjali = UN-J-LEE:
UN as in 'UNdo' or 'UNder'
J as in 'Junk' (just a short JUH sound)
LEE
Sachdeva = SUCH - DAY -VAH..."
Hahaha well that works for me because in my mind I was pronouncing it Ann-jelee (like Angelina sort of) Satch ( rhymes with with hatch ) Diva :-)

The Winter Queen by Boris Akunin
2. Have you read the author before?
No
3. Where is the author from?
Russia



I spent two months in Rwanda about 10 years ago - I don't know the name Mukasonga, but I met a lot of women and girls with names that began with Muka; often it's put before one of the parents' names e.g. a man called Gasana might call his daughter Mukagasana. These are given names, not surnames - they're not inherited. Rwandan children are usually given both a western (used to be French but nowadays more likely to be English) name and a Kinyarwanda name.
The 'u' in 'muka' is a short 'oo' instead of an 'uh' (as in 'June' not as in 'luck'), and the emphasis is on the 'ka'. I'm not sure on 'songa', as I said it's not a name I came across, but I think it would be pronounced like 'song' with an 'ah' for 'apple' at the end.
Scholastique is French and as you might have guessed, it means scholastic. It's pronounced similarly to the English word, except the -que at the end is pronounced like the end of 'mystique'. You can probably find a French-English dictionary online that would give you a better pronounciation guide!
1. What are you reading for this category? Washington Black by Esi Edugyan
2. Have you read the author before? No
3. Where is the author from? Canada
I will say, I do know how to pronounce it now cause I listened to the audiobook and the reader said it at the beginning so I made a note! I'll still mess it up, I mess up all names. At college graduation, my roommate of 4 years who was from India, informed me I always pronounce her name wrong, I've never said a name right since then.
2. Have you read the author before? No
3. Where is the author from? Canada
I will say, I do know how to pronounce it now cause I listened to the audiobook and the reader said it at the beginning so I made a note! I'll still mess it up, I mess up all names. At college graduation, my roommate of 4 years who was from India, informed me I always pronounce her name wrong, I've never said a name right since then.

I am reading City Life by Donald Barthelme
2. Have you read the author before?
I have. He is much anthologized, but I hadn't read this particular collections of short stories before.
3. Where is the author from?
He is American, but that doesn't mean the pronunciation is more straightforward (quite the contrary, I find).

The World of Lore: Wicked Mortals
2. Have you read the author before?
Technically yes. The first time, was right before reading this book. I read the first book in the series.
3. Where is the author from?
The United States.


I'm putting How Dare the Sun Rise: Memoirs of a War Child in here; by Sandra Uwiringiyimana. I've watched a youtube video of her saying her name (after reading the book) and I still don't think I can say her last name correctly.

39. A Book by an Author Whose Real Name(s) You're not Quite Sure how to Pronounce: The Golden Son by Shilpi Somaya Gowda
It was an interesting story about a young lad from India who goes to Texas to do his doctor training and falls in love.

The Silent Patient
2. Have you read the author before?
No, this is his debut novel.
3. Where is the author from?
His bio says that he was born in Cyprus.
Cheri wrote: "1. What are you reading for this category?
Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
2. Have you read the author before?
Yes. She's terrific!
3. Where is the au..."
I read Purple Hibiscus by this author, having already read Half of a Yellow Sun and Americanah. She is excellent and I learned how to pronounce her name when she appeared on Trevor Noah's show. As an African and a speaker of multiple languages, he always pronounces guests' names correctly. My problem is remember how to spell her name!
Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
2. Have you read the author before?
Yes. She's terrific!
3. Where is the au..."
I read Purple Hibiscus by this author, having already read Half of a Yellow Sun and Americanah. She is excellent and I learned how to pronounce her name when she appeared on Trevor Noah's show. As an African and a speaker of multiple languages, he always pronounces guests' names correctly. My problem is remember how to spell her name!

2. Have you read the author before? No, although she is a Pulitzer Prize winning novelist.
3. Where is the author from? Alabama and New Orleans

Have you read the author before? Nope.
Where is the author from? China

2nd time around I am going with Ijeoma Oluo and So You Want to Talk About Race. I didn't even know if this author was male or female (Female!)
According to You Tube, it sounds like Ee-jyo-ma Oh-loo-aw
According to You Tube, it sounds like Ee-jyo-ma Oh-loo-aw
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Peter Høeg (other topics)
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Suggestions:
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The Millions - Hard to Pronounce Literary Names
Pinterest - How to Impress Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - Sorry for poor quality!
Book Browse - Author Pronunciations
Soledad Unified School District Libraries - Pronouncing Dictionary of Author's Names
ATY Group Listopia
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Optional Questions:
1. What are you reading for this category?
2. Have you read the author before?
3. Where is the author from?