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  <title>EP98: Any Good Books on the Booker Long List?</title>
  <description>We're switching it up a little bit this episode, as the Booker Prize Long List has just been released and it's fun to talk about what they've chosen — plus, the judges this year are really interesting! These are&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;chosen from 153 submissions, celebrates the best works of long-form fiction by writers of any nationality, written in English and published in the UK and/or Ireland between 1 October 2024 and 30 September 2025.&amp;quot; Some of the books we've read, some we've just heard about, some we have no idea about. Play along!&amp;amp;nbsp; Here's the list as we tackle it: - &amp;quot;Seascraper,&amp;quot; by Benjamin Wood, which is not available in the U.S.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;The Rest of our Lives,&amp;quot; by Ben Markovitz, which is not available in the U.S. (though Ben is from the U.S. and used to be a professional basketball player) - &amp;quot;Audition,&amp;quot; by Katie Kitamura, which is so out there that Hannah legit doesn't know how to talk about it. No one seems to know what's happening with this book.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;Endling,&amp;quot; by Maria Reva, which we talked about quite a bit in EP92 (not 94, as Sam says on the pod, for no good reason), and is a substantive, interesting, weird novel, but maybe not Sam's favorite.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;Flashlight,&amp;quot; by Susan Choi, a National Book Award winner, which Hannah started out super excited about, but then her fervor sort of faded... There's some great stuff in here about Japan-Korea history and the immigrant story, in general.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;The Land in Winter,&amp;quot; by Andrew Miller, which Hannah hasn't read, but she does remember that &amp;quot;The Optimists&amp;quot; was big and she meant to read it.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;Love Forms,&amp;quot; by Claire Adam, who was published by Sarah Jessica Parker, who also happens to be a judge! But we're sure it's a coincidence. &amp;quot;Like a Claire Keegan novel written by Elizabeth Strout,&amp;quot; apparently. - &amp;quot;Universality,&amp;quot; by Natasha Brown, which we know is short and is all about words and meaning.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;Misinterpretation,&amp;quot; by Ledia Xhoga, which is similarly about words and meaning. We don't know much, really. But there seems to be a theme here.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny,&amp;quot; by Kiran Desai, who has a Booker Prize under her belt. This book is going to be big.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;One Boat,&amp;quot; by Jonathan Buckley, which is about a murder and a love affair on a Greek island.&amp;amp;nbsp; - &amp;quot;The South,&amp;quot; by Tash Aw, which is this year's young gay love story, Hannah thinks, though she's not sure, but it is the first of a quartet of novels, &amp;quot;a reimagined epic for our times.&amp;quot; - &amp;quot;Flesh,&amp;quot; by David Szalay, which is a stylish Hungarian novel, a coming-of-age sort of thing.&amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Four Books a Fortnight</author_name>
  <author_url>https://bookshopofbeverlyfarms.com/cool-stuff/podcast-four-books-a-fortnight</author_url>
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