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2025 Booker Longlist: Love Forms by Claire Adam

Book 4 for our panelists was Love Forms by Claire Adam.

Book Synopsis from Booker website: Trinidad, 1980: Dawn Bishop, aged 16, leaves her home and journeys across the sea to Venezuela. There, she gives birth to a baby girl, and leaves her with nuns to be given up for adoption.  

Dawn tries to carry on with her life – a move to England, a marriage, a career, two sons, a divorce – but through it all, she still thinks of the child she had in Venezuela, and of what might have been.  

Then, 40 years later, a woman from an internet forum gets in touch. She says that she might be Dawn’s long-lost daughter, stirring up a complicated mix of feelings: could this be the person to give form to all the love and care Dawn has left to offer? 

Jen’s Thoughts: I have to admit that I went into this book with some pre-judgments. I don’t particularly like that Claire Adam’s prior book was published by SJP’s imprint but I tried to set that aside when reading. Keep that prejudgment in mind when reading my review.

This book was just okay. It did not stand out for me in any way and while I liked the descriptions and history on Trinidad, at times those sections made me feel like I was sitting in a lecture hall and not reading a novel.

The premise was interesting but I found the main character to be bland and I struggled to emotionally connect to her experience. This was a privileged woman from a very affluent background facing a loss that I experienced as one muted by her privilege. I didn’t hate it, it didn’t love it. I found quite a bit of it boring. I certainly don’t understand how it made the Booker longlist.

Writing quality: 3/5
Originality: 3/5
Character development: 3/4
Plot development: 2/4
Overall enjoyment: 1/2
Total: 12/20

Nicole’s Thoughts:  Sorry but this makes no sense to me. I get really annoyed with Booker when there are celebrities on the judging panel. I shouldn’t, but I do. I would love to be proven wrong – and maybe last year was an exception, but this book is not Booker worthy. It’s a nothing new story …. it didn’t bring anything new to the topic, the writing wasn’t special, the characters didn’t blow my mind … it was totally average. Forgettable.

Writing quality: 3/5
Originality: 2/5
Character development: 3/4
Plot development: 2/4
Overall enjoyment: 1/2
Total: 11/20

Lisa’s Thoughts:  Based on what everyone else said about it, I decided to reserve my reading time for other opportunities.

Anita’s Thoughts: Tedious. The first chapter is the highlight, and even that chapter wasn’t all that great. I have no idea how this book made it onto the longlist for the Booker. I’ve hated books in the past, but was always able to see what made them unique and worthy of listing. This one completely escapes me.

Writing quality: 3/5
Originality: 1/5
Character development: 3/4
Plot development: 1/4
Overall enjoyment: 0/2
Total: 8/20

Tracy’s Thoughts: Um. Yeah. It was okay. I think it would have been a great short story. At least I didn’t feel icky after reading it like the Szalay.

Writing quality: 3/5
Originality: 2/5
Character development: 3/4
Plot development: 2/4
Overall enjoyment: 1/2
Total: 11/20

Rankings

1. Audition: 17.88
2. Flashlight: 14.2
3. One Boat: 13

4. Love forms: 10:5

Have you read it?  What do you think? Want to try it for yourself? You can purchase your copy here: Love Forms.

2025 Booker Longlist: Flashlight by Susan Choi

Next up for our panel is Susan Choi’s Flashlight. All five panelists read this book and we were pretty split in our reviews. Which reviewer do you side with?

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2025 Booker Longlist: One Boat by Jonathan Buckley

Next up for our panel is One Boat by Jonathan Buckley. Four of our panelists finished and reviewed the book, one abandoned it. Here are our reviews.

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2025 Booker Longlist: Audition by Katie Kitamura

Our panel’s first longlist nominee is Audition by Katie Kitamura. Four of our panelists read this book, one panelist couldn’t finish it. Here are our panelists’ reviews…

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2025 Booker Longlist

It’s out! The Booker longlist was released today at 2pm BST. How did our panel do with their predictions? Here are the thirteen books that made the list.

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2025 Booker Prize Longlist Predictions

Once again Booker has rolled around. Every year our panel comes together to read and review all the booker nominees and to predict the winners. This year’s longlist will be announced on July 29. Every year we try and most years we fail spectacularly to get more than 3 correct predictions each. Will we have better luck this year? Keep reading to find out who we all selected and let us know what you think.

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Audition by Katie Kitamura

Life has been hectic so the blog has been slow/dormant for a few months. Despite my silence, I’ve been reading a decent amount and trying to go into Booker season with more books under my belt. Audition has been getting some very mixed reviews and I know quite a few people who hated it and abandoned it. Keep reading for my review. Will this make my prediction list for this year’s Booker longlist?

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The City and its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami

Those of you who have followed the blog for a while already know that Murakami is one of my favorite authors so it’s probably no surprise that I picked a Murakami novel as my first read of the year. 2024 was less than stellar for me from a reading perspective. Work burnout and life stress left me with little energy and motivation to read (outside of our Booker feature) and even less time. So I go into 2025 hoping for a better reading year and I always enjoy a good Murakami novel. Did this book live up to my expectation? keep reading to find out.

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Booker 2024 Winner predictions

It’s time for our panel to pick our winner. Find out which book our panelists think will win the prize this year. The prize will be announced tomorrow (and thus the reason for why I pushed out the last three posts in the same day.

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Booker shortlist 2024: Held by Anne Michaels

Apologies for rushing through these last three posts but time got away from me and I wanted to post this last one before our predictions post (which I will also post tonigh). Our panel had somewhat mixed reviews for Held. You can read our short reviews here: Held. The novel made it onto 3 of our predictions lists with Nicole, Tracy, and Anita predicting it. The Booker judges had this to say about the book…

‘The first few pages of this brief kaleidoscopic novel from the author of Fugitive Pieces may seem forbidding, yet every member of the judging panel was transported by this book. Michaels, a poet, is utterly uncompromising in her vision and execution. She is writing about war, trauma, science, faith and above all love and human connection; her canvas is a century of busy history, but she connects the fragments of her story through theme and image rather than character and chronology, intense moments surrounded by great gaps of space and time. Appropriately for a novel about consciousness, it seems to alter and expand your state of mind. Reading it is a unique experience.’

What does our panel think of the odds of this book being this year’s winner? Keep reading to find out

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