70 classic Booker Prize-nominated novels
From books that changed the world to contemporary works that are certain to endure, these are your must-read classics from the Booker Library
Opinion
We asked this year’s judges to share their best tips for making more time for fiction in the new year
Does your TBR pile fill you with guilt every time you glance at it? Do you pick up a book, only to find yourself distracted a few pages deep? If this sounds like you, you’re not alone. We all know that reading can be a balm for the soul, but finding the time – and motivation – can often feel like a Herculean task.
But fear not. For some, breezing through stacks of books is all in a day’s work. Take the Booker Prize judges, for instance – a panel of creative peers who are selected every year to read well over a hundred books in about seven months. And while reading for the prize is a serious endeavour, trust us when we say that your day-to-day reading doesn’t have to be nearly so daunting.
Here, we asked each of the Booker Prize 2024 judges for their advice on how to read more – and more effectively. Their tips will help you conquer your own TBR pile in the new year and, most importantly, enjoy the process along the way.
‘My advice, for what it is worth, is to find a book buddy. Talking about books is a generative act – it makes reading more a natural part of everyday life. ‘Where have you got to with X? What is next?’ It is the perfect strategy for more and more. And carry a book. Everywhere. It is in all those small interstices of time that you can read.’
‘It helps to stick to a disciplined reading schedule, treating it like work to be done at appointed times and giving it priority in the diary. Having said that, I know I’m on to a potential winner when I come across a book I can’t bear to put down. There were a few that I ended up propping in front of me while doing dishes or on the Stair-master, or that caused me to miss my Tube stop several times. I can’t wait to be able to tell everyone which ones they were. When a book is that good, I find it’s never a struggle to fit the reading in; it’s a struggle to fit everything else in! Anyone who loves reading will know what I mean.’
‘I have always advocated for slow and steady reading. I don’t suppose we live in a busier time than people in the past, but we live in a time with many more distractions. I always tell my students that instead of getting online or looking at their phone first thing in the morning, they can spend 15 to 20 minutes reading a chapter of War and Peace. If they do that, by the end of a 12-week semester, they can finish reading the entire book. For readers who want to fit more reading into their lives, perhaps set up a reading corner where screens of any kind (phones and tablets and computers) are not allowed?’
’Reading and concentration are increasingly difficult: I read a listicle about it. Tip one, I guess, is to put your phone in a different room, and to replace scrolling with a book when eating, commuting or being stood up on dates. We swim in a sea of words, these days, so I’d also recommend turning to the classics – a voice from another time can cut more clearly through the contemporary verbiage. But mostly, the phone thing.’
I find that, as much as possible, adhering to a schedule of reading is the best way to work through so many books. Personally, I like to read between 5am and 9am, when I have a clear mind, before I properly begin my day. It’s important to approach each book one page at a time until you find yourself unable to put it down. A great book compels you to keep reading until the end.