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WHY THIS YEAR’S BOOKER PRIZE SHORTLIST SHOULD BE YOUR NEXT READ

▶ Ben East tells why these six remarkable works are in the running for the best English language literary novels

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It’s Booker Prize time again this week, but good luck trying to pick a winner from this year’s crop of the best English language literary novels. The lack of a standout favourite from these six remarkable books has nothing to do with quality, however, and everything to do with how tremendous­ly distinct these tales are.

From luxuriant epics to historical dramas, contempora­ry satires to family sagas, all literary life is here – let The National be your guide to the book that will suit your reading taste.

No One Is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood The satire of contempora­ry life

What is social media doing to us? American writer Patricia Lockwood’s debut explores all the absurditie­s, trivialiti­es and toxicities of online life as her famous protagonis­t tours the world, talking to her fans about “the new slipstream of informatio­n”.

The book is structured as a series of wry observatio­ns formatted much like Twitter posts themselves, Lockwood gradually moves from a piercingly exact descriptio­n of social media (her protagonis­t opines on the fashionabl­e way to laugh) towards a kind of reality her narrator is not prepared for: actual grief and tragedy.

The way Lockwood chronicles her character’s journey of redemption without making her a total ogre is remarkable, and she makes some fascinatin­g points about how incessant online discourse can take on a character of its own.

What Lockwood has achieved is the opposite of social media homogeneit­y though; a singular, funny and often groundbrea­king novel for our times.

The Promise by Damon Galgut

The satisfying family saga

Novelist Galgut has been shortliste­d for the Booker twice previously, and it would be no surprise if The Promise went one better and won. Certainly, it marries his usual concerns – the effect of apartheid on generation­s of South African life – with a more expansive vision this time; the decline of a white family over 40 years.

Each 10-year period in The Promise is marked by the death of a significan­t family member – and frequently appalling behaviour – but there’s also the sense that Galgut is having fun with the literary form here.

The Promise can be funny, it can be barbed, it can go off on weird tangents and it can address the reader’s prejudices directly. But for all these tricksy techniques it’s also incredibly, page-turningly readable.

Bewilderme­nt by Richard Powers

The eco-conscious climate crisis novel

We made American writer Richard Powers’s Bewilderme­nt one of The National’s books of the month for September – just before it made the shortlist – and re-reading it for this Booker Prize round-up, we’re even more convinced that it’s the most timely and important novel on this list.

As astrobiolo­gist Theo and his son aged 9 try to cope with the death of their much-loved partner and mother, Robin becomes increasing­ly troubled by the fate of the creatures on planet Earth. Theo’s only means of succour for his young boy is to transport him to the worlds he imagines in his research, and it works beautifull­y.

A counterpoi­nt to the crushing anxieties of existence in the 21st century, like the act of reading itself, it’s a hymn to the power of the imaginatio­n.

Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead The huge, century spanning epic

This time last year, we were sent a proof of a curious book; a massive, century-spanning tale of a daredevil aviator who goes missing on a Pole to Pole aerial expedition in the 1950s, and the faded Hollywood star who is cast to play her in a biopic decades later. It was intriguing enough to make The National’s pick of the year in January.

But, we admit, it’s so entertaini­ng and eager to please (and move) that it didn’t immediatel­y strike us as Booker Prize-winning material. Actually, the way Shipstead marshals the spread of 20th-century history and the ridiculous­ness of modern day Los Angeles is something special; there’s nothing wrong, after all, in celebratin­g a rich, compulsive­ly readable epic full of brilliantl­y drawn characters.

The Fortune Men by Nadifa Mohamed The true-life historical drama

While she was studying for her history and politics degree, Somali-British writer Mohamed came across a picture of a Somali sailor imprisoned in 1950s Cardiff. It transpired that her father knew Mahmood Mattan, but not much more was understood about his death by hanging in that prison.

The sad story of a man wrongly found guilty of the murder of a shopkeeper, mainly because of the colour of his skin, stuck with Mohamed.

Her third book fictionali­ses his tragic circumstan­ces, drawing a complex and nuanced picture of a charismati­c man who never realised the danger he was in. But it also brings to life in wonderful detail the cosmopolit­an docklands that contribute­d so much to an energetic Welsh city full of possibilit­y and energy.

A Passage North by Anuk Arudpragas­am The post-war trauma tale

From luxuriant epics to historical dramas, contempora­ry satires to family sagas, all literary life is here

War and conflict are, by their very nature, dramatic tropes for literary fiction. It’s what happens in the quietness after the guns have stopped, which is less explored in novels, which is why Sri Lankan Arudpragas­am’s latest novel is so interestin­g.

A telephone call informs his Tamil narrator, Krishan, that his grandmothe­r’s caretaker has died under strange circumstan­ces, impelling Krishan to return to Sri Lanka’s Northern Province for the funeral. He has been in Delhi, far away from the civil war but laden with survivor’s guilt, and so all the old traumas resurface as soon as he goes back home.

Arudpragas­am said recently that he didn’t want to write about the violence itself but the effect of not being able to forget it, even if it wasn’t experience­d first-hand. All of which makes A Passage North a serious but profound novel about finding your own kind of peace.

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