Tournament of Books discussion
2026 ToB
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2026 Hopefuls


https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2...
I really enjoyed Women, Seated. The translator was Jeremy Tiang, who chooses some very interesting novels to translate.

I am notoriously bad at figuring out what will be on the list, but I just started Deep Cuts and I think it has some possibility. The voice feels so unique.

Here to third Run for the Hills--great, new spin on road trip novel


I'm actually reading another, out-of-the-ordinary road trip novel--this one set in the 1500s as a couple of acolytes transport the recently exhumed body of a saint to a waiting monastery. One of the miracles attributed to the saint is the heavenly aroma the body emits that makes some people feel...randy, others hungry. The body is never safe. Unfortunately, Recital of the Dark Verses was published in 2023 but woulda made a great TOB book. Sorry for the digression.






I've really liked the books of his that I've read and it would be fun to throw this kind of thing (historical fantasy?) into the mix.



Also I'm almost done with The Bright Years. I have no idea why this is rated so high. It makes The Wedding People seem like high lit.


-Oyinkan Braithwaite ("My Sister the Serial Killer")
-Angela Flournoy ("The Turner House")
-Mona Awad ("Bunny")

Universality by Natasha Brown. Just didn't get the feel for this book. A book ostensibly about class (I mean, is that a giant metaphor on the cover?), really felt like a book about grievance--everybody's got one. Maybe that's where the title's from.
On Earth As It Is Beneath is one of my favorite books of 2025 so far. Gritty, grimy, it doesn't reach the heights of her previous book in my estimation, but this is a worthy novel. Powerful author; has shades of early Cormac McCarthy.
Archive of Unknown Universes felt half-baked to me.
Anyone else get to Vera, or Faith by Gary Shteyngart? I enjoyed this one immensely though it felt like it was for children--perhaps due to the child narrator.
Also, just started The Möbius Book by Catherine Lacey and am finding it quite consumable. While it may be an awkward fit in the tournament, it's worth a conversation I think.

I bought Katabasis in hardback (I was meh on Babel but loved Yellow Face) and it is a stunning objet d'art and will look amazing on my shelf. Also, dark academia is my jam.

Other books from this year I've read, but I'm not sure they're ToB material:
"When the Moon Hits Your Eye" (John Scalzi) - really enjoyed it, but I love anything Scalzi writes. I'll concede this isn't his best work, though.
"When the Tides Held the Moon" (Venessa Veda Kelley) - Loved this book. Beautiful prose and the author is an artist, so the book was gorgeous to look at. On the surface, this looks like it should be a fluffy romance novel, but there are some great themes to explore and discuss.
"Atmosphere" (Taylor Jenkins Reid) - Yes, it's popcorn. But, man. As a child of the 80s who wanted nothing more than to go to Space Camp, I LOVED this one.
"A Marriage at Sea" (Sophie Elmhirst) - It's non-fiction, so I'm guessing that disqualifies it from ToB (still new-ish here, so I'm learning the ropes). But that's ok. This book has all sorts of potential, but outside of the the shipwreck part, it's kinda meh. A lot of the other bits feel more like trying to bump up the page count, because the actual story could be told in about 40 - 50 pages.


I don't envy anyone trying to fit The Terror in though. that's a monster of a book, no pun intended

I don't envy anyone trying to fit The Terror in though. that's a monster of a book, no pun intended"
But The Terror was already ON my tbr list. I actually just took it off the shelf....

NBA long list!"
I've read Flashlight (loved it) and The Antidote which I found entertaining.


I felt like the 'modern day' sections could have been taken out and the book would have been stronger for it.





I felt like the 'modern day' sections could have been taken out and the book would have been stronger for it."
Now that I've finally finished it, I agree.
Also loved Endling.

And So Far Gone is also excellent. There are so many potentially great books being published this year, that we might have a truly great ToB.

2025 Finalists for Fiction:
Rabih Alameddine, The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother)
Grove Press / Grove Atlantic
Megha Majumdar, A Guardian and a Thief
Knopf / Penguin Random House
Karen Russell, The Antidote
Knopf / Penguin Random House
Ethan Rutherford, North Sun: Or, the Voyage of the Whaleship Esther
A Strange Object / Deep Vellum Publishing
Bryan Washington, Palaver
Farrar, Straus and Giroux / Macmillan Publishers

I bought Kata..."
The ungainly (and sometimes syntactically incorrect) sentences in Babel drove me around the bend. I, too, like Dark Academia but I cannot invest in a doorstopper if the prose is mediocre. Perhaps Katabasis will be better on that score than Babel was. But until readers I trust confirm that, I am going to stay away.

2025 Finalists for Fiction:
Rabih Alameddine, The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother)
Grove Press / Grove Atlantic
Megha Majumdar, A Guardian and a Thief
Knopf /..."
Though a whaling story doesn't sound like my thing, I am pleased to see a nonprofit press represented on the NBA shortlist, and for that sake alone I would be willing to give 'North Sun" a go if it makes the ToB longlist.
Books mentioned in this topic
Helm (other topics)So Far Gone (other topics)
Heart the Lover (other topics)
North Sun: Or, The Voyage of the Whaleship Esther (other topics)
The Möbius Book (other topics)
More...
(Last year, I had only read 5 of the longlist when it was released... hoping for a better outcome this year!)
So use this thread to post about books that fit the ToB mold and may end up on the long/short list for the 2026 tournament!
(Mods, I'm unable to make a new folder for this thread, so feel free to move it to the appropriate place!)