Baileys Fiction Prize Long List Challenge. Books 1-4
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Before embarking on this challenge I have already read 3 of these books. In a moment of potential madness, 3 out of 20 seemed an optimistic number to inspire me to venture on with the remaining 17. I then found I Am China in the charity shop and apparently it was a sign! It may be a slow progress through the year but I have to admit that I am enjoying every minute of reading these celebrated women writers!
The books: Station Eleven, Elizabeth is Missing, The Life of a Banana and I Am China
Here's a quick overview of what I thought of the first books so far...
I Am China
I wanted to love this book, I really did. I completely got what it was trying to do and it painted a really vivid picture of political China and the struggle for a right to a voice, however, I found the main narrator, Iona, really jarred me, I found her character really quite arrogant and flat - there is such a beautiful story of two Chinese lovers separated across the globe by the desire to make a stand against the corruption of the country and I feel that Iona's story doesn't add anything to this and rather than focus on her own inability to feel anything other than sexual need, I wanted her to stand up and go on an epic journey to reunite these lovers and raise a flag to the freedom of speech in the corruption of China, maybe next time.
Elisabeth is Missing
The Life of a Banana
This book was not for me. I can recognise what PP Wong was trying to do with this book and hats off to her for being first British Born Chinese novelist to get a publishing deal in the UK but I struggled to really get this book. There were alot of satirical, bordering on farcical moments in the book that I wasn't really sure if they were meant to be a literary device and possible ironic, or an actual description of slapstick stupidity. I think the fault lies almost entirely with me and my reading rather than the book itself. As a book club choice, I wouldn't necessarily have chosen this for myself otherwise but I'm glad I dd read it and it is worth a read.
Station Eleven
Oh, Station Eleven, I've read this twice now and done it in all my (many) bookclubs including a couple of discussions with the author herself and so I feel I know this book inside and out, and I still love it. I think what strikes me with this book and one of the reasons it has done so incredibly well is the sheer originality of the plotline - After the apocalypse of human kind, only 1% of the population has survived and now 20 years later we're homing in to where they are at. I think it did brilliantly to cut out all the chaos and violence of the happening and aftermath that would've made it like every other apocalypse book out there. It doesn't give you an essay about the science behind it and how much humans abuse their privileges, it focuses on Shakespeare and the arts of all things. It's brilliant and it's written with the mass market in mind. Even if it's 'not your kind of thing', you should read it once anyway - it's less about sci-fi and more about human nature - it may surprise you.
Do you want to know what the best thing is about the Bailey's Prize long list? They're all so very different, in genre, writing style, life/political and moral messages and they make you think about everything in completely different ways. So far, Station Eleven has been my favourite but there are 16 more to go and I'm pretty excited about getting my hands on some of them already.
The books up next:
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