With the hindsight of history, the Booker misses plenty of tricks. In 1986, The Handmaid’s Tale, one of the most vital and prescient works of modern fiction, was pipped to the prize by Kingsley Amis’s The Old Devils. With Margaret Atwood now elevated to the status of a contemporary prophet, 2019 may have seemed like an opportunity to redress that mistake. Published with all the fanfare of a new Harry Potter and accounting for 86% of shortlist sales, her sequel has dominated this year’s award, sprinkling some much-needed publishing glitz.
Booker judges try to have it both ways | Books | The Guardian
14 October 2019
Tags in Links Topics
Amazon
Authors
Bestselling authors
Book sales
Children's authors
Children's books
Children's publishing
Crime-writing
Crime fiction
Crime writer
e-books
Indie authors
Poems
Poetry
Poets
Prizes
Publishers
Publishing
Publishing houses
Publishing industry
Publishing world
Readers
Reading
Self-published writers
Self-publishers
Self-publishing
Writers
Writers' careers
Writers' craft
Writers' stories
Writing
Writing habits