Tag Archives: #fiction

2024 Literary Awards for Fiction

Literary Awards Season = Lots of Gift Choices

So it’s time to start shopping for holiday novels, assuming your friends, relatives, and colleagues have the time and interest in reading fiction. If you should find yourself to be so fortunate as to have a flamboyance not of flamingos but of bibliophiles in your life, you might consider some of this year’s top literary award winners and finalists. To simplify the process, I’ve put a few of them together here for your viewing pleasure. Happy shopping — and reading!

2024 Booker Prize (Winner: Orbital by Samantha Harvey)

  • Shortlist: James (Percival Everett), Creation Lake (Rachel Kushner), Held (Anne Michaels), The Safekeep (Yael van der Wouden), Stone Yard Devotional (Charlotte Wood)

2024 Nobel Prize for Literature (Winner: Han Kang)

  • Translated Works (English): The Vegetarian (2007), Greek Lessons (2011), Human Acts (2014), The White Book (2016), We Do Not Part (2021)

2024 Giller Prize (Winner: Held by Anne Michaels)

  • Shortlist: What I Know About You (Éric Chacour), Curiosities (Anne Fleming), Prairie Edge (Conor Kerr), Peacocks of Instagram (Deepa Rajagopalan)

 2024 Atwood Gibson Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize (Winner: Batshit Seven by Sheung-King)

  • Shortlist: What I Know About You (Éric Chacour), Prairie Edge (Conor Kerr), Code Noir (Canisia Lubrin), Hi, It’s Me (Fawn Parker)

2024 Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction (Winner: Empty Spaces by Jordan Abel)

  • Shortlist: Code Noir (Canisia Lubrin), The Memoirs of Miss Chief Eagle Testickle: Vol. 1: A True and Exact Accounting of the History of Turtle Island (Kent Monkman, Gisèle Gordon), Her Body Among Animals (Paola Ferrante), Naniki (Oonya Kempadoo)

2024 National Book Award for Fiction (Winner: James by Percival Everett)

  • Finalists: Ghostroots (‘Pemi Aguda), Martyr! (Kaveh Akbar), All Fours (Miranda July), My Friends (Hisham Matar)

2024 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (Winner: Night Watch by Jayne Anne Phillips)

  • Finalists: Same Bed Different Dreams (Ed Park), Wednesday’s Child (Yiyun Li)

International Booker Prize 2024 (Winner: Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck)

  • Shortlist: Not a River (Selva Almada), The Details (Ia Genberg), What I’d Rather Not Think About (Jente Posthuma), Mater 2-10 (Hwang Sok-yong), Crooked Plow (Itamar Vieira Junior)

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If I Could Turn Back Time…

Image result for time travel

No, it would not be to recreate a Cher song. Or maybe it would. I’m not sure at this point because I have the stupid thing playing on a loop in my head right now.

Writing for futurism.com, Chelsea Gohd published a piece called “We Can’t Alter The Flow of Time But, According to Physics, We Can Bend It” a few days ago, and I lapped up every word.

We’ve all considered the notion of time travel at one point in our lives. Don’t deny it. Ever since that excellent! film (not movie) Back to the Future II, when Biff steals a sports almanac and goes back in time to make himself crazy rich, we’ve all entertained notions of joining the Biffs of the world.

As far as I understand – and with much of what I learned at M.I.T. relegated to the depths of the Mariana Trench – Einstein conceived of travelling forward in time (assuming we could reach the speed of light), but never back in time. He did leave open one possibility that even he could only speculate about: wormholes.

Although I’m generally apathetic when it comes to sci-fi literature and movies, I’ve been thinking a lot about the space-time continuum lately because of a Korean novel I’m helping to translate, author Kim Hee-sun’s The Multiverses of Infinity (무한의 책).

It goes without saying that I’m ecstatic to be part of a project I truly believe in and helping breathe life into it for English readers one day. (Think Kafka meets Murakami Haruki in a dark Prague alley, somehow the two speak the same language, and after a quick meet-and-greet of sorts, they decide to stroll off together to a Harajuku jazz club, where they will discuss beautifully shaped ears and huge insects.) And since the plot of Multiverses involves a character going back in time, it’s got me thinking.

Without giving away too much of the plot, the central driving force for this character to go back in time is to help someone, not hurt them, and not to benefit in any selfish way like our friend Biff. If we as human beings ever do come up with a way to travel through time, I can’t help but wonder what our motivation would be.

Anyway, Ms. Gohd’s article on space-time is nothing short of fascinating and illuminating. And to quote Gohd quoting Stephen Hawking at the end, “Even if it turns out that time travel is impossible, it is important that we understand why it is impossible.”

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