Sunday, December 17, 2006

Opening today's Sunday Telegraph and turning to the gossip column about books, Literary Life, (which I couldn't link to for some reason) I found the following:

'Congratulations to Claire Messud, the only British author to feature in the New York Times top five most notable works of fiction of 2006.'

If you may follow the NYT link you'll spot that is the top ten novels (although she does appear to be third and thus arguably could be described as being in the top five). But what surpriseme was that she was described as British. I checked on Wikipedia:

'Born in the United States, Messud grew up in Australia and Canada, returning to the US as a teenager. Her mother is Canadian, her father is of Algerian origin, and her sister is French. Messud was educated at Yale University and then Cambridge, where she met her spouse, the British literary critic James Wood [1]. She has taught in the MFA program at Warren Wilson College in North Carolina and in the Graduate Writing program at Johns Hopkins University. Messud was considered for the 2003 Granta Best of Young British Novelists list, but none of the three passports she held was British.'

I double-checked with Andrew Kidd, described by Robert McCrum as the  'charming, sophisticated publisher of the cutting-edge paperback list at Picador' who confirmed that she is not British.

Why am I pointing this out?

I suppose firstly because I'm fed up with journalistic inaccuracy. It's pretty easy to check that sort of fact. Harder to check whether the £12m Jeffrey Archer is supposed to have received as an advance from Macmillan is correct because we don't disclose our financial arrangements with authors. What I can say is nobody should believe what they read in newspapers, particularly when it comes to authors' advances.

Secondly, because the story is a perfect illustration of globalisation in our industry. The New York Times is as important in the UK now as the London Times used to be. The nationality and domicile of an author is becoming irrelevant.

However, the really important thing is that Claire Messud's books are receiving the attention and praise they deserve. It's not too late to buy The Emperor's Children - just check out the reviews.

Picture of - The Emperor's Children

Incidentally, can anyone help me find a dvd of my favourite poker film, Big Deal at Dodge city (properly known as A Big Hand for the Little Lady)?

12/17/2006 11:51:31 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Hi Richasrd,

It is a rather good con film. You can get the film from:
http://www.amazon.com/Hand-Little-Lady-Henry-Fonda/dp/6301923782

12/17/2006 12:05:00 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Richard, suprised you didn't mention that Picador also publish the number 1 non-fiction title, the brilliant, Falling Through the Earth by Danielle Trussoni.
12/17/2006 12:05:54 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Well, deeply daft about the 'British' thing and they should have checked, of course, but to be fair, the NYT list is a top ten, but it has separate categories for fiction and nonfiction.

The first five books are headed: 'FICTION'; if you scroll down, you'll spot that these five are followed by a group of five which are headed, 'NONFICTION'... so she is in the New York Times 2006 TEN BEST BOOKS of 2006, but in their 'FICTION' category of five.
Jolie
12/17/2006 1:24:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Idlereader - thanks but I was looking for a dvd rather than a tape - it'll have to do!

Jonathan - spot on. Not a bad haul for Picador.

Jolie, that's a fair cop on the top ten/five but the point of the piece was that she is British and she isn't!
12/21/2006 10:57:22 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I'm intigued -- does big hand for a little lady really stand up to repeat viewing if you know the twist?
12/21/2006 4:57:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Good question. Can't really put it to the test without the dvd!
1/6/2007 6:21:54 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Did you ever find a source of the DVD 'A Big Hand for the Little Lady'? I'm looking for exactly that for myself...I see tapes for sale on Amazon but yet to find DVD.