Picador authors choose their books of the Booker Prize

We asked some of our Picador authors to share the Man Booker books they've loved most since the prize's inception in 1969.

Since 1969, The Man Booker Prize has celebrated & rewarded the best novel of the year written in English, with past winners including The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst, Graham Swift's Last Orders, and The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood.

We asked some of our authors to share the Man Booker books they've loved most since the prize's inception.

The Bone People

by Estate of Keri Ann Ruhi Hulme

Book cover for The Bone People

Chosen by Sarah Butler, author of Ten Things I've Learnt About Love and Before the Fire.

I read and then re-read The Bone People by Keri Hulme (which won in 1985) more than a decade ago now. It’s stayed with me as a luminous, entrancing, sometimes frustrating, occasionally shocking novel, imbued with hurt, love and a rich sense of the New Zealand landscape.

Chosen by Emma Flint, author of Little Deaths.

The Bone People is full of beauty: the lyrical descriptions of nature and of love are some of the most uplifting and vivid I’ve ever read. It’s also overflowing with violence and fury and darkness and grief. I first read it when I was twelve, and it made an indelible and powerful impression.

Hotel World

by Ali Smith

Book cover for Hotel World

Chosen by Sylvia Brownrigg, author of Pages for You and Pages for Her.


What kind of world do we live in? Great novels tell us. The hotel is a vivid cultural metaphor, and in Ali Smith’s lyrical novel Hotel World (shortlisted in 2001), it illustrates the inequality measured by who is allowed in, and who is left outside. Ghosts and the homeless, employees and guests, jostle together in contradiction, in a narrative shot through with Smith’s characteristic humour and compassion.

In a Strange Room

by Damon Galgut

Book cover for In a Strange Room

Chosen by Alan McMonagle, author of Ithaca.


Recounted from his future self as three separate journeys, a man offers himself to the world as follower, lover and guardian. Tender. Wise. Candid. Intense. Elemental. Moving. A consummate meditation on time and place; memory and recollection; and of a man's efforts to step away from himself and at the same time discover who he is. In a Strange Room was shortlisted in 2010. 

number9dream

by David Mitchell

Book cover for number9dream

Chosen by Ryan Gattis, author of Safe and All Involved.

 

This deeply imaginative book (which was shortlisted in 2001) refined my idea of what a literary novel could—and perhaps even should—be. Eiji Miyake’s journey to find his father has remained with me, and I’m still struck by Mitchell’s sensory details of Japan: the smells, and the tastes, above all.

We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves

by Karen Joy Fowler

Book cover for We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves

Chosen by Hannah Kohler, author of The Outside Lands.

 

Perhaps it’s because I’m a twin. I read this strange, beguiling novel about twinhood three years ago, but the story still turns in my head. We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves (shortlisted in 2014) is about familial love, and all the harm and wonder it entails. It is an immensely human tale with an extraordinary (non-human) twist. I won’t spoil it for you.

Hotel du Lac

by Anita Brookner

Book cover for Hotel du Lac

Chosen by Alicia Drake, author of I Love You Too Much. 

Novelist Edith Hope is a beautifully drawn character struggling to salvage her dignity within the genteel and claustrophobic confines of the Hotel du Lac. Hope observes English society at its most cynical, while being forced to survey her own life and yearnings with courage and painful lucidity. Brookner’s Hotel du Lac - which won in 1984 stays with you, a slow-burning beacon that confronts loneliness, self-knowledge and the constraints of female status.