David Szalay's Flesh -- the blokiest winner of the Booker prize
This discussion thread was locked as off-topic by Omaha Steve (a host of the Latest Breaking News forum).
Source: The Times (London)
Flesh by David Szalay, 51, is almost certainly the most monosyllabic Booker prizewinner ever. With its protagonist who communicates in gruff, gruntish yeahs, nos and okays, Szalays riveting sixth book has the terse narrative style of a thriller. It might also be the blokiest winner I mean the one most focused on masculinity. It seems likely to appeal to that elusive creature, the 21st-century male reader of novels, as much for its easy-on-the-attention-span pace as Szalays intriguing hero.
Ive no doubt that Flesh will prove a popular choice, not least because it contains plenty of sex, sexily told. Szalay, who was Booker-shortlisted in 2016 for All That Man Is, which explored different stages in mens lives, here follows an ex-offender named István over the course of 50 years. István is at once a highly specific product of a particular time and place (post-Communist Hungary, where Szalays father emigrated from) and an everyman. My aim was to try to be as honest as possible about what its actually like to be a male body in the world, Szalay said in an interview earlier this year. Its a portrait that centres on male bodily demands for sex, adventure, security but also about where those bodily demands lead a person.
István is a species of working-class man who feels new to literary fiction. In most novels he would almost certainly be an extra a goon, basically. Hes employed variously as a soldier, a driver, a strip club bouncer and bodyguard, and when he finally strikes gold, its as a property developer, though for much of the story he hardly seems ambitious. Hes quiet, brooding, emotionally detached, and from a certain vantage point, a passive receptacle for the desires of others indeed, its his encounters with a randy older female neighbour that ultimately lead to the crime he commits as a teenager. This sets the course of his curious life.
Read more: https://www.thetimes.com/culture/books/article/booker-prize-2025-winner-david-szalay-flesh-shortlist-jqhtwnvbq
Has anyone read it?
iemanja
(57,139 posts)niyad
(128,540 posts)Seeing this line, on sex, "There was oblivion there, and omethiing satisfyingly like violence as well." tells me that I won't be reading the book.
But I thank you for posting, because it reminded me to check out the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest for this year, only to learn that it had been retired.
Omaha Steve
(107,797 posts)This is mostly a book report.
Statement of Purpose
Post the latest news from reputable mainstream news websites and blogs. Important news of national interest only. No analysis or opinion pieces. No duplicates. News stories must have been published within the last 12 hours. Use the published title of the story as the title of the discussion thread.