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Booker Prize for Fiction
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2026 Booker Prize speculation
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Mohamed
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Sep 08, 2025 01:59AM

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I don’t think Ali Smith allows her books to be considered for the booker anymore, does she?

You are welcome Hugh. Thanks also for all the great work you do in here.

Indeed, I have an ARC and will delve to it soon.

Welcome Garry! Yes, one of the most anticipated novels for me

There is also a new Valeria Luiselli novel coming in July 2026 . What most excited about is This Is Where the Serpent Lives, this his debut novel


https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...

https://yalereview.org/article/audrey...


I believe Ali Smith does not allow them to be submitted, but the judges can call for it if they believe it is worthy, so her work remains eligible - someone correct me if I am wrong?


His debut was shortlisted for The Booker in 2020

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...

I've just finished Our Numbered Bones by Katya Balen which started off quite simply but finished as something which made me feel I had read something very strong (perhaps suiter more for the Women's Prize, though I wouldn't rule it out for the Booker longlist).

From the award-winning author of Lost Children
Archive and Tell Me How it Ends comes her most
powerful and page-turning novel yet.
Beginning, Middle, End is a story of a mother and a daughter
as they take off on a trip after the collapse of a marriage.
Their journey begins in Sicily during a summer of rapidly
changing winds, volcanic rumbles, and sudden tempests.
How do you begin again, the mother wonders, pondering
her family line, How do you begin again if you got the
beginning wrong? As their trip progresses, her daughter
takes the reins of the story, and their journey becomes a
quest for origins —not just to the familial past across
continents, languages, and generations, but also further
back to a mythical and even geological past. With her
daughter beginning to form complex memories and her
own mother showing signs of dementia, the narrator
confronts some of the primary questions of life: How do
stories shape our children’s imaginations? How do we
situate ourselves deeply in the world while accepting our
transience in it? How are a family’s memories made and
what happens when they disappear?
The novel will be published in May 2026 in Spain and July 2026 in UK and USA
Rights are already sold in 15 languages

Sharp as a blade, Avni Doshi returns with a story of betrayal, projection, family entanglement, and the ways in which our past continues to haunt us, even as we strive to
break free.
Imago follows a young woman grappling with the sudden revelation that her husband is leaving
her. Shocked and devastated, she tries to understand how her seemingly happy marriage, with
two children, unravelled so unexpectedly. When she tries to confide in her family, childhood
memories and strained dynamics come to surface. Although close to her parents, their
relationship has never been the same since her marriage—largely due to her older sister,
unmarried and still living at home, who disapproved of her husband. The narrator’s reflections
and recurring dreams lead her deeper into her past, where long-buried memories resurface—
particularly around her older brother, Bhai, who mysteriously left the family at 18 and was
effectively erased from their lives. And when she examines her marriage, she uncovers
unsettling truths—her husband’s lies, the STD he gave her, and her unresolved doubts about
motherhood. Despite these red flags, she still chose to move forward, eventually confronting
her own blind spots and the reasons behind her creative block as a writer.
The novel unfolds amid rich imagery from astrology, mythology, art history, and entomology
woven through the narrative, shaping the narrator’s evolving consciousness. Imago is a novel
about the protection family provides and sacrifice it requires, and how remaining in the dark
can offer both comfort and danger. Ultimately, it is a story about personal growth, identity, and
the universal patterns that shape our lives.


I think that's the US pub date. It's already out in the UK.

If I’ve seen correctly Rose Tremaine has a new book coming out coming out next year based on a short story she did. It’s called the housekeeper and is inspired by Rebecca.

It will be published in January by Bloomsbury
https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/this-is...
Books mentioned in this topic
Transcription (other topics)This Is Where the Serpent Lives (other topics)
Transcription (other topics)
Transcription (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ben Lerner (other topics)Ben Lerner (other topics)
Ben Lerner (other topics)