Monday, 2 January 2023

Virtual Costa Book Awards Part 3: Linda Newbery and guests

 


Here's the final batch of virtual awards. We're luckier than the real Costas - we can award as many as we like! For this final post, alongside some of our regular or previous guests we welcome two new ones: Louise Ellis-Barrett, editor of Armadillo, the online children's book magazine and blog, and author and screenwriter Frank Cottrell-Boyce. Thank you to all our guests for their choices, and congratulations to all our virtual winners.

JOHN NEWMAN of Newham Books awards the Virtual Costa Novel Prize to Seven Steeples by Sara Baume.


Sarah Baume’s latest work, shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize, traces seven years in the lives of Bell and Sigh as they inhabit a rented cottage in rural Ireland along with their two dogs. What they do in their cottage is never explained; instead the minutia of their lives is explored with real warmth and a level of detail never applied to their actual relationship. We learn about the contents of each room and how their routines shape them. We discover ways the cottage and its environs are changed by the weather and the seasons. This is a greater focus then how they adapt and relate to each over time. Even so, you feel they want to be together and there is something deeply reassuring about this. And all the time you wonder if they will ever climb an overshadowing mountain to view those Seven Steeples. This is a small book with big themes and not a word is wasted.

PENNY DOLAN's choice is a second Virtual Costa Novel Prize vote for Bonnie Garmus for Lessons in Chemistry (also chosen by Helena Pielichaty in Part 2):

Set in 1960’s America, the novel is about a brilliant young chemist, Elizabeth Zott, whose life’s purpose is scientific study, no matter what. And there is an awful lot of what in Zott’s life: an unschooled childhood; loneliness and loss, single motherhood, type-casting and brutal misogyny from the academic establishment.

Yet Lessons in Chemistry is a delight. As light and swift to read as a fairy tale, the sometimes painful plot turns with wit and humour until the clues and relationships click into place or as deserved. This is a book about determination, hope and the fight for equality, with a fictional heroine I could not help cheering for, despite the fact she would not care whether I did or not. Besides, how often does good fortune spring from one daughter stealing another’s perfectly packed lunchbox? Thank you, Bonnie Garmus, for a bright book in a dark time.

JON APPLETON awards the Virtual Costa First Novel Prize to Taymour Soomro for Other Names for Love:

A dazzling coming-of-age novel in which Fahad is flung from his comfortable, knowable London life into unfamiliar, primitive-seeming Pakistan at the demands of his formidable father who wants to mould his son in his own uncompromising image. Both father and son are grappling with their identities: Fahad is gay but is forced to be restrained and secretive while his outgoing, fearless father is facing the erosion of his authority and influence in his local community. The novel is about love and taboo and family ties, all sparely evoked with a strangely haunting immediacy. Perhaps most impressive of all is the way the story leaps across time and space to begin again, years later, losing none of the novel's cohesion.

LINDA NEWBERY awards the Virtual Costa Novel Prize to Patrick Gale for Mother's Boy:

Mother's Boy
is a thoroughly engrossing, moving and informative novel based on the life of the reclusive Cornish poet, Charles Causley - taking in his wartime experiences as a coder and his first forays into writing drama. The viewpoint alternates between Causley and his devoted mother, Laura, who has her own story. With a sure eye for detail Patrick Gale conjures social and domestic life and draws inferences from Causley's poetry and correspondence to portray his secretive inner life and sexuality. As I'd felt sure that Mother's Boy would feature strongly in the real Costas this year had they happened, it has to be my choice for the novel award.

JANE ROGERS awards the Virtual Costa Biography Prize to Osman Yousefzada for The Go-Between:

This memoir tells the magical tale of a Pashtun boy born into a poor immigrant community in Birmingham, who has become a world-celebrated artist and designer. His mother is a skilled seamstress but it is Osman, as a young boy, who chooses the fabric and delivers the garments. The loving descriptions of his mother’s fabrics reveals a fascination and talent which has since shaped his life, as a fashion designer for the likes of Beyonce and Lady Gaga. Both parents are illiterate, deeply devout Muslims. At puberty Osman, like other Pashtun boys, is banished to his father’s side, the world of men. He fares better than his sisters, though; they are removed from education around the age of 11, and from then onwards kept hidden from the sight of any men. Yousefzada finds himself torn between his people’s culture and the white culture he has to absorb at school, where racism and ignorance are meted out by pupils and teachers alike.

What is most compelling about this wonderful book is its child’s eye view of the complications and contradictions which surround him. He never judges, he simply tries to understand.

YVONNE COPPARD gives the Virtual Costa Biography Prize to Stanley Tucci for Taste - My Life in Food:

If you love Italian food, you will surely love this. Have a napkin handy just in case you start drooling. Stanley Tucci’s obsession with food borders on the disturbing in places - is he really joking when he insists that cutting spaghetti with a knife is an unforgiveable, if not capital, offence?

Tucci writes with warmth, wit and occasional flashes of insight about the life passion for good food that was instilled by his Italian American family. Humour, like the food, infuses everything, even the brief poignant passages touching on matters such the untimely death of his first wife.

Best of all, there are recipes scattered throughout the book. I will not be trying timpano anytime soon; Tucci’s savagely funny description of Christmases ruined by this monstrous culinary beast is persuasive. Thankfully, though, most of the recipes seem to infuse the very pages with aromas and tastes that will draw you into the kitchen to have a go.

LOUISE ELLIS-BARRETT awards the Virtual Costa Children's Book Prize to Belladonna by Adalyn Grace:

It was not a difficult choice to nominate the deliciously, captivatingly dark Belladonna as my book of the year. It is a richly imagined web of intrigue, a rich gothic romance, dark and spectacular. Jinxed as a baby to see all those around her fall and die, it is perhaps a wonder that Signa comes of age and reaches the time at which she will inherit her family wealth. Signa is a mystery; her life is full of mystery, one that only deepens as the story unfolds. Never far from her side Death makes a fascinating and dangerous shadow and primary character in the story causing us, as readers, to question our own preconceived ideas. I was quickly addicted to the writing, the characters and this story which promises and delivers so much. A sequel is promised in 2023, I for one cannot wait!  

FRANK COTTRELL-BOYCE awards the Virtual Costa Children's Book Prize to Lissa Evans for Wished:

It was unusually difficult to choose a winner as it’s been a year of terrific books by the likes of Maisie Chan, Phil Earle and SF Said but I’m going to go for Wished by Lissa Evans. Because - like Groundhog Day or The Phoenix and the Carpet - it takes a really simple, funny conceit and works it until every possible laugh, tear and scrap of wisdom has been wrung from it. Ed and Roo are sent to stay with an elderly neighbour - Miss Filey - while their house is being done up.
 
There they discover that Miss Filey’s birthday candles really do grant wishes. But only for as long as the candle is burning. LIssa Evan’s background is comedy and this is a VERY funny book. It contains the funniest cut from one scene to another I’ve ever come across. But it’s also full of heart and wisdom. When the children finally come to realise that Miss Filey has unfulfilled wishes of her own, I defy you not to shed a tear.

PATRICK GALE awards the Virtual Costa Novel Prize to Jessica Andrews for Milk Teeth:

My nomination is a fantastically original novel that was oddly overlooked given how well her debut, Saltwater, was received: Jessica Andrews' Milk Teeth.






What would you have chosen, in any of the five categories? (Novel, First Novel, Biography, Poetry, Children's). Please tell us in the comments!








2 comments:

Unknown said...


I am loving these Costa Book Awards and as a result have several of the nominated titles on my to read/buy/borrow/steal list. Great idea from Writers Review.

Helena Pielichaty

Sue Purkiss said...

Great idea - will certainly be trying some of these!