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The Goldsmiths Prize
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2024 Goldsmiths Prize shortlist discussion
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One I forgot was the new Galley Beggar as I didn’t know much about it as to whether it was innovative.
And of course the one GY read in ARC and forgot to mention!!!!

I'm surprised to see a Fitzcarraldo book, which has been out for awhile, only have one review on Goodreads.


I think my record for that on past Goldsmith shortlists is even more successful than Rachel Cusk !!!
I created threads for all six books but the Cusk one hasn't appeared. Maybe because I included a mini-rant on Captchas. Today has been the worst yet for that - 10 Captchas for the last 7 threads.

I didn't like it very much to be honest
Created another Cusk thread and that has disappeared too. This is beyond stupid - moderators should be trusted to moderate!

If the Goodreads listopia had been correct - then two of the books here would be on the Booker longlist.

I did predict a shortlist on X - all three made that list. Well actually three lists (18 books) but still.


https://www.theguardian.com/books/202...
Sorry, that was another failed attempt. It definitely appeared in the folder for a few seconds, but by the time I'd written the first version of this comment it had been removed again. I have literally no idea what I did wrong this time.

I wasn't sure how seriously to take it, although it's gotten a lot of traction - a number online now busily cancelling Cusk, which basically means they never read her and now won't, but wouldn't have anyway. I did find Long Chu's comments about penis envy quite amusing though. But then again she's known for her extravagant takedowns.
The article's paywalled here so not sure how many people are likely to have read it, but it's accessible via 12ft io

Jonathan - a great reviewer and ex active member of this group - always had a thing against Cusk and used to soar with Paul over her.
One of his criticisms - which always strikes me when I read her work - is that most of her most profound seeming sentences can basically have all the nouns swapped in any order and be as profound (or in his view vacuous).
So I was amused to see:
“In formlessness she discovered power, and also a freedom from limitation,” a narrator says about their mother in Parade — a beautiful sentence until one realizes that any of the nouns could be rearranged without injuring the impression that one is reading an awful truth


Does feel like they had to give her the prize eventually (although you could sand the same for Beryl and the Booker) but it’s definitely a case of (using another Booker tradition) right author wrong book …. One of the trilogy (either first as the start point, or last on behalf of trilogy) should clearly have won the prize.


It doesn't sound like something you'd enjoy, the White Pube described Second Place as a beach read for middle-aged, women gallery directors imagine they'd say the same about this.

Ironically of course this book has a middle aged woman gallery director as a key character - dealing with the aftermath of a suicide in Berlin.
“It might seem rather ridiculous, she said, and even irrelevant, to spend your time curating artistic events and organising talks and discussions about artists, when the slightest change in reality can render those activities obsolete or impossible. But then it struck me, she said, that what happened at the museum today reminded me of nothing so much as a work by G herself. The power of disturbance in G’s work, she said, seems linked to the actual disturbances of reality such as the one we witnessed, but I haven’t yet been able to formulate any thoughts about that link.”

https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/...

Definitely disparaging but couldn't decide if it was actively ageist or not, as doesn't seem desperately out of step with Cusk's likely fans. Obvs only anecdotal but the three people I know in the real world who're avid Cusk readers fit the profile, one's a curator, one's an art administrator, one lectures in visual culture, all three are women, all three over forty.

Though both over forty - and then some - indeed, oddly, both were born on the same day.

The White what? Apparently, I've read Second Place. Can't remember a word of it.

The White what? Apparently, I've read Second Place. Can't ..."
Here you go:
https://thewhitepube.co.uk/about/

Palace Of ... is a new entry in my all time top 10 - Parade sneaks into top 20, but is 3rd/12th in the winners list (only once have they chosen the winner I would have chosen).

https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/...
I liked this bit
Sometimes, when a new, bold novel, full of innovation, lands in the hands of a gatekeeper who declines to publish it, I believe this person hears the call through the receiver of a telephone from another age. Where’s the plot, the story, the narrative arc? Why hasn’t a formidable housekeeper with a dodgy eye entered the novel carrying a tureen of hearty soup and a crusty loaf? Yet, what is coming through the vintage receiver are the beautiful languages and forms of our own century. I’m thinking of the new cadence and startling points of view in Pond by Claire-Louise Bennett, A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing by Eimear McBride, Assembly by Natasha Brown.
Books mentioned in this topic
Second Place (other topics)Second Place (other topics)
Second Place (other topics)
Parade (other topics)
Choice: A Novel In Three Narratives (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Lara Pawson (other topics)Mark Bowles (other topics)
Neel Mukherjee (other topics)
Jonathan Buckley (other topics)
Rachel Cusk (other topics)
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The 2024 shortlist has just been announced. These are the six books: