All in Prize Winners & Finalists
Set in Ireland in the mid-nineteenth century, The Wonder fascinates with the story of Lib Wright, a nurse who trained with Florence Nightingale. She has been hired for two weeks to observe 11-year-old Anna O’Donnell, who claims not to have eaten for four months. Her parents and the local priest and politicians believe that she is a living miracle. Her fame has spread so widely that believers make pilgrimages to meet her. Lib believes she will uncover with ease and efficiency the deceit in the little girl’s and her family’s claim. Instead, she finds herself pulled into Anna’s saint-like aura.
You don’t need me to tell you that this book is a masterpiece. The Pulitzer Prize committee did that a few weeks ago when they awarded Colson Whitehead his second Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Whitehead’s phenomenal writing style simultaneously draws you into the world of his story, while illuminating difficult truths about his characters and our society.
What an absolutely lovely surprise I had reading this book! Although it had been recommended to me by one of my all-time favorite people (thank you, Diana), when I read the flap copy, I was skeptical. Set in a remote Polish mountain village, Drive Your Plow tells the story of recluse Janina Duszejko, part-time caretaker of houses, translator of William Blake, devoted astrologer and animal lover extraordinaire. Described as a thriller and a whodunit, I couldn’t imagine how it could possibly live up to its hype.
I confess, I had never heard of Richard Powers before my friend Jane recommended that I read The Overstory -- because it was good and because it had won the Pulitzer Prize. I’m not sure how I missed Powers, who has published 11 books prior to The Overstory. But now that I’ve read the book, I can understand why it won the prestigious prize.
It’s hard to categorize this book, and I am sure I have never read another one like it. Part mystery, part thriller, part brain teaser, every page you turn the story gets weirder and more engrossing.
Caroline Fraser has written a fascinating biography of Laura Ingalls Wilder. Using precious little autobiographical information left by Wilder and supplementing it with a similarly small amount left by her daughter, Fraser adroitly weaves a compelling tale of Wilder’s life. She explains how Wilder came to write her beloved Little House on the Prairie series in the midst of the Great Depression when she herself was in her mid-sixties.
I found it funny how many people, when they saw the cover of American Pastoral over the weeks that I was reading it, stopped me and said, ‘Oh, that is one of my favorite books!’ It sparked a great conversation about other Roth books with my mom, in which I realized I have only read one other,Indignation.
If you are looking for an absorbing read about lives falling apart, look no further. Set in a small town in Connecticut, the book begins with a beloved teacher and town hero being accused of sexual misconduct by several of his teenage students. He is arrested and held without bail until his trial.
We’re well into our second year of the L & L Review and up to this point I’ve never reviewed a book about history. Historical fiction, sure. But reading an entire book about history? Normally that would appeal to me about as much as reading an entire book about math. So how did I happen to find my way to Team of Rivals? It’s a selection for my Bates College Boston Alumna book club and is going to be discussed in November. Since it’s 800+ pages, I thought I better get to it.
When reading a Pulitzer prize winning novel, I find myself not only enjoying the read, but also wondering what it is about the novel that made it worthy of such distinguished recognition. Less is the absolutely charming story of Arthur Less who is approaching his 50th birthday, realizing his mortality and coming to terms with his less-than-notable writing career.
Continuing the dystopian theme, I recently got around to reading this 2005 Pulitzer Prize-winner and completely loved it. Unlike The Girl with all the Gifts, an action packed story where everything goes wrong, in Ishiguro’s dystopia, it is almost hard to distinguish the differences between his world and ours.
The Sellout has been on my reading list for a while now, not only by recommendation, but also because it won Beatty the Man Booker Prize, the first time an American had done so. I began with high expectations and was nearly stopped in my tracks by the prologue. Here Beatty’s roots as a slam poet are on full display, and without much plot to grab onto, the reader is thrown hundreds of references in a giant swirl of politics.
As most of my family know, I have made it my goal since moving to Canada almost three years ago, to read more Canadian fiction. I like getting a sense of the country’s history without actually having to read a history book. So I was excited to receive Clara Callan, a winner of the Governor Generals Award, for Christmas this year.
Right off the bat I want to say that this Giller Prize winner is deserving of the honor, and well worth the lengthy commitment. Thien’s prose is gorgeous and evocative and the story subject was one completely foreign to me.
I picked this novel up because it was a National Book Award finalist and was on a list of best books to read. From the opening scene, I was hooked and really couldn’t stop reading until I finished it. I keep recommending it to anyone who likes reading fiction.
Call me lazy, but I think one of the reasons that I don’t often pick up collections of short stories is because they take a bit more effort to read than a novel. I mean, you’ve just figured out who all the characters are and how they relate to one another and where the story is set and when, and the story is over and you have to start all over again with another story. Who wants to work that hard, right? Wrong! You must read Elizabeth Strout’s newest short story collection, Anything Is Possible.
I loved this novel and am recommending it to everyone I know who reads fiction. I picked it up because it was a Man Booker Prize finalist. What an amazing find!
Another Pulitzer Prize winner, I picked this book up for no other reason than that it won in the year I was born. And as it is my birthday month, it seemed a fun and random way to celebrate 32!
Last year’s Pulitzer Prize winner for fiction, this debut novel is somehow both brutal and funny, eye-opening yet reassuring. The story is told from the perspective of a young man serving a high-ranking General in the Vietnamese Army as the Americans are pulling out of the war in 1975.
From the author of Room, you will not want to put this book down. The story follows an English nurse named Lib, who has been hired by a small town in Ireland to watch an 11-year-old girl who has reportedly been living without food for over four months. Most in the town believe this to be a miracle, but Lib is tasked with watching closely for any trickery, before the girl can be declared officially miraculous.