Tag Archives: Booker Prize longlist 2025

The Booker Prize Longlist 2025

Today the Booker Prize longlist was announced. I am familiar only with a few of the authors, which makes it all the more interesting. Good news: many are already available in the U.S. The rest are on order.

Here is the Longlist 2025:

Love Forms by Claire Adam

The Link  by Tash Aw

Universality by Natasha Brown

One Boat by Jonathan Buckley

Flashlight by Susan Choi

The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny by Kiran Desai

Auditon by Katie Kitamura

The Rest of Our Lives by Ben Markovits

The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller

 The Endling by Maria Reva

Flesh by David Szalay

Seascraper by Benjamin Wood

Misinterpretation by Ledia Xhoga

Are you familiar with any of these?

Booker Prize Fever

The Booker Prize judges: I know two of them, Roddy Doyle (far left) and Sarah Jessica Parker (far right).

During a bitterly cold February, I was excited by the Booker International Prize longlist.  In muddy March, it was the The Women’s Prize longlist. In July I’m usually excited about the Booker Prize longlist, but I seem to be in the midst of a longlist breakdown.

I blame this on the Women’s Prize longlist, which was dominated this year by pop fiction. There was a Read with Jenna selection (which was actually excellent) and a GMA Book Club selection (unreadable).  With the exception of Elizabeth Strout’s Tell Me Everything, I was tepid about the shortlist.  As for the winner, even I predicted it would win: it had been floating around on shortlists for months.

Before the internet, I’d never heard of a longlist. The newspapers printed the shortlist and the winner, and that was sufficient in the U.S. But all the English and Canadian bloggers wrote about the longlist. I tried one year to read the entire list, inspired by an excellent blogger, who, as I recall, got kicked off an official Booker Prize discussion board, which they then shut down. (Wow, what was going on there?) Anyway, I suddenly needed a Victorian lit infusion after reading four or five of the longlisted books.

 Here’s what the Booker Prize has going for it already this year:  Roddy Doyle and Sarah Jessica Parker.  Miraculously, these two judges have name recognition.  And that’s a smart move for the Booker.

Doyle, one of my favorite Irish writers and the Booker Prize winner in 1993, is, to judge from his novels, brilliant, witty, and charming. Ditto for Parker, the actor best known as Carrie Bradshaw in Sex and the City and And Just Like That. She is also a voracious reader of literary fiction, and a publisher with her own imprint.

The judges aren’t the only obsessed Booker readers. The BookTubers (bibliophiles on YouTube) start predicting the Booker Prize longlist as soon as the Women’s Prize ceremony is over. God help them, they read the whole list every year! Two of the best-known vloggers, Eric Karl Anderson of Lonesome Reader and Simon Savidge of SavidgeReads, can tell you everything about Booker 2025. (Both are prize enthusiasts, but Simon is slightly less tactful. ) Then there is a lower circle of vloggers who, God help them, say what’s on their mind. Some seemed actively depressed by the Women’s Prize list, which was, as I have indicated, “different” this year.

Are you excited about the Booker or not?  Some Are … and Some Are Not…

I’m secretly looking forward to it, though I have vowed not to buy the books!

The longlist will be announced on Tuesday, July 29.