All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr has won the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. The book is a poignant story of a young boy and girl on different sides of World War 2. Marie-Laure, blind since she was six, and her father escape German occupied Paris to live on the…
Folio Prize shortlist sees some intriguing omissions
Sometimes, the list of entrants who don’t make make it onto the shortlist for a literary prize can be as interesting as those who do. The prestigious Folio Prize, which is open to books of any genre from anywhere in the world, written in the english language and published in England, this week named its final eight, and there were some surprising omissions. First the shortlist which includes some exciting and original works:
An Unnecessary Woman by Rabih Alameddine is a book to which you will want to keep returning
Aaliya lives alone in the second-floor apartment in a none too salubrious part of Beirut and contemplates the gaudy transformation of her city and the imminent arrival of old age with its growing catalogue of “accepted defeats”. She had been subjected to relentless pressure, and occasional threats, by her family after her (impotent, not that they knew that) husband had moved on leaving her with the social disgrace of divorce. No, she dug in. This was her home. And she needs the space for her enduring companions, her books.
“Books everywhere, stacks and stacks, shelves and bookcases, stacks atop each shelf … how many hours have I moved around this room, from nook to nook, making sure that everything is in its proper place, every book in its proper pile, every dust mote annihilated?” It is in their pages that she finds companionship, conversation and an often dryly-witty observation of the vagaries of life in a constantly changing Beirut. As