The Guardian (USA)

And the winner for best book that inspired a best picture nominee is …

- Kate McCusker

A 721-page biography about the father of the atomic bomb, a send-up of the publishing industry’s simplifica­tion of black lives and a Glaswegian tale of an adult woman with an infant’s brain: the books that inspired this year’s best picture Oscar nominees are as varied as the films they spawned. Leading us to ask: if there was a golden statuette for “best book that inspired a best picture nominee”, what would the contenders be?

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Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann

Journalist David Grann’s 2017 investigat­ion into the murder of wealthy Osage Native Americans for their oil rights is a remarkable book. While Martin Scorsese’s epic three-and-a-halfhour film adaptation focuses on the first two sections of it, Grann’s investigat­ion goes further, exploring how a sinister conspiracy in 1920s Oklahoma led to “the world’s richest people per capita becoming the world’s most murdered”.

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American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J Robert Oppenheime­r by Kai Bird and Martin J Sherwin

American Prometheus is as epic in scale and scope as Christophe­r Nolan’s best picture frontrunne­r. This 721-page tome is everything a biography should be: painstakin­gly researched (it was 25 years and tens of thousands of documents in the making), deftly written and illustrate­d with great photograph­s. While Nolan’s adaptation is something of a whistle-stop tour of Oppenheime­r’s life, culminatin­g in his 1954 security clearance hearing, Bird and Sherwin’s authoritat­ive biography leaves little to be answered. The film-maker’s adaptation is impressive, but the authors’ ability to condense years of research into a compelling page-turner that doesn’t once feel like a slog is more impressive still.

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The Zone of Interest by Martin Amis

The Zone of Interest seems misplaced among the nominees for best adapted screenplay given that it shares little more than a title with Martin Amis’s novel. That it deserves a place among the best picture shortlist, though, is unequivoca­l. In stark contrast to Jonathan Glazer’s stark adaptation, Amis’s 14th novel is often classed as a black comedy – though with its mise en scène of the “popping, splatting, hissing” of an Auschwitz murder meadow, you’d be forgiven for failing to see the funny side. The book toggles between three perspectiv­es: that of camp commandant Paul Doll (modelled on real life Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss, on whose domestic life Glazer’s film focuses), Angelus Thomsen, an SS-Obersturmf­ührer intent on having an affair with Doll’s wife, and Szmul Zacharias, a member of the camp’s Sonderkomm­ando, the prisoner work unit responsibl­e for extracting gassed prisoners’ “goldstoppe­d teeth with pliers and chisels” and grinding their ashes. Though they share nothing in the way of plot, the central theme of Amis’ masterful novel echoes down through Glazer’s equally indelible film: “Who are you? You don’t know. Then you come to the Zone of Interest, and it tells you who you are.”

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Poor Things by Alasdair Gray

You can’t help but wonder how Scottish author Alasdair Gray, who died aged 85 in 2019, would receive Yorgos Lanthimos’s suitably madcap adaptation of his 1992 novel Poor Things. (Delightedl­y, one would assume, aside from the Glaswegian erasure.) Purported to be a late Victorian memoir found in a rubbish tip by Gray, who is credited only as its editor, the full title of Gray’s novel is Poor Things: Episodes from the Early Life of Archibald McCandless MD, Scottish Public Health Officer–though that probably wouldn’t

 ?? ?? Perfect parody … Jeffrey Wright as Thelonious ‘Monk’ Ellison in American Fiction. Photograph: Claire Folger
Perfect parody … Jeffrey Wright as Thelonious ‘Monk’ Ellison in American Fiction. Photograph: Claire Folger
 ?? Emma Stone as Bella Baxter in Poor Things. Photograph: AP ??
Emma Stone as Bella Baxter in Poor Things. Photograph: AP

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