“A Long Way from Home” delves into the crimes that built a continent, and how to move forward: “Guilt is such a wrong word. The useful word is, I think, responsibility.”
Tag Archives: Booker Prize
Do women writers have ‘literary cooties’?
A remarkable study of the kinds of books that win big prizes reveals this: Don’t write about women. Unless, that is, you’re a man.
Kazuo Ishiguro goes back in time
Ishiguro’s long-awaited novel explores new terrain—and not just because of the ogres
Author quits Booker Prize adviser role to protest expansion
One author involved with the Man Booker Prize has already quit in protest after the news that the U.K. literary award is being opened up to allow authors of any nationality to win it.
A new life for Pi
Ang Lee recreates the story of a shipwreck, a boy and a tiger in three dimensions
REVIEW: A Death in Summer
Book by Benjamin Black
Newsmakers: July 28-August 4
Sheila Copps stages a comeback, Glenn Beck hits a new low, and Britain’s Royal Rebel says ‘I do’
How faithful do you need to be?
The Booker winner and a GG nominee take very different approaches to historical fiction
Post-literate
Yann Martel has compiled his letters to Stephen Harper in a book.