But which genres? And what do we mean by "literary" anyway?
The question is timely because, as author P.A. O'Reilly tweeted yesterday, new prizes - including The Stella Prize - are more open to "judging the work, not the 'genre'." So how do we identify the literary?
According to O'Reilly, literary books "reward a second reading with another layer of meaning". Author Claire Corbett goes further: "A literary book doesn't give you what you demand but what you never knew you wanted." Quality writing has subtext, according to Corbett, including non-fiction; too much writing has no subtext, she says, because such craft takes time.
Is it all a matter of craft and layers of meaning? Or are some genres more likely to be considered literary than others?
Clearly some Speculative Fiction titles have no trouble attracting the attention of major literary awards - Corbett's 2011 release, When We Have Wings, for one, was shortlisted for the Barbara Jefferis award, while Meg Mundell's Black Glass was Highly Commended by the judges of the same award.
But what of other genres, such as crime?
When crime writer Peter Temple won the 2010 Miles Franklin Award for his crime novel Truth, an expectation was set up that well-crafted crime novels would attract the attention of literary judges. Last year's inclusion of Kirsten Tranter's psychological suspense novel, The Legacy, and this year's inclusion of Virginia Duigan's The Precipice on the Miles Franklin longlists appear to support this view. Yet PM Newton's 2010 - in my opinion, equally brilliant - The Old School, didn't make the grade. Was it perhaps - being a detective novel - considered too generic?
Which crime novels released in 2012 - including detective, paranormal, YA, historical fiction, crime-romance and nonfiction titles - deserve to be considered "literary" in your view?
Crime: 2012 releases
The following books released in 2012* and reviewed for the AWW challenge between January and June this year have been divided into subgenres:
- general/thriller/psychological suspense
- historical fiction
- crime/romance (sometimes referred to as "romantic suspense")
- crime/paranormal
- YA/Children's and
- True Crime.
Tally: 18 books, 25 reviewers, 43 reviews, 10 publishers.
Publishers: Penguin: 4 books, 10 reviews; Random House: 3 book 7 reviews; ClanDestine Press: 3 books, 3 reviews; HarperCollins: 2 books, 5 reviews; Hachette: 1 book 6 reviews; Pan MacMillan: 1 book, 4 reviews; Pantera Press: 1 book, 3 reviews; Black Opal: 1 book, 1 review; EgmontUSA: 1 book, 1 review; Walker Books: 1 book, 1 review.
General/Thriller/Psychological Suspense
- Erskine, YA – The Betrayal. (Random House/Bantam)
@ Book'd Out - Ford, Jaye – Scared Yet. (Random House)
Helen, Rachael Johns, Brenda, Shelleyrae @Book'dOut - Foster, Sara – Beneath The Shadows. (Random House/Bantam)
Helen, Michelle Dennis Evans - Howell, Katherine – Silent Fear. (Pan Macmillan)
Brenda, Helene Young, Shambolic Living, Shelleyrae @ Book'd Out - James, Wendy – The Mistake (Penguin/Michael Joseph)
Lizzy, Bree @AllTheBooksICanRead, Brenda, Bernadetteinoz, Shelleyrae @ Book'd Out, Angela Savage - Parry, Bronwyn – Dead Heat. (Hachette)
Aussie Book Reviews, Brenda, Bree @1girl2manybooks, AustBookshelf, Stephanie & RIASS, Book'd Out -
Parry, Bronwyn. Dead Heat. (Hachette 2012) Aussie Book Reviews, Brenda, Bree @1girl2manybooks, AustBookshelf, Stephanie @RIASS, Book'd Out, Jenny, Kate Cuthbert
Historical Fiction
- Gentill, Sulari – Miles off Course. (Pantera Press)
Bernadette, Caroline Sully, Jacquie Underdown - Young, Felicity – A Dissection of Murder. (HarperCollins)
Tseen Khoo, Shelleyrae @ Book'd Out
- Andersen, Maggi – Murder In Devon. (Black Opal Books)
AustBookhelf - Young, Helene – Burning Lies. (Penguin)
Brenda, Bree @1girl2manybooks
- Harris, Narrelle M – Walking Shadows. (ClanDestine Press)
@tansyrr
- Bailey, Em – Shift. (EgmontUSA)
Nicola Marsh - Calder, Charlotte – The Ghost at the Point. (Walker Books)
Stephanie @ RIASS - Foster, Rose – The Industry. (HarperCollins)
Book'd Out, Bree @1girl2manybooks, Mandee VYAN - Giarratano, Leah – Disharmony: The Telling. (Penguin 2012)
Bree @1girl2manybooks
True Crime
- Bonney, Hillary – The Double Life of Herman Rockefeller. (Penguin 2012)
Simone, (Michelle - link broken) True Crime - Petraitis, Vikki – The Frankston Serial Killer. (Clandestine Press 2012)
Amra Pajalic True Crime
Short Stories
- Scarlet Stiletto: The Second Cut. (Clandestine Press 2011 or 2012?)
N M Harris Crime/Short Stories
~ ~ ~
Guest author reviews
Of the above authors, Jaye Ford, Katherine Howell, YA Erskine and Helene Young have all reviewed for the challenge (that's why the covers of their recent releases are featured here).
Helene has written multiple reviews, including:
- Let the Dead Lie by Malla Nunn
- Silent Fear by Katherine Howell and
- The Fine Colour of Rust by PA O'Reilly.
Other crime titles (some not reviewed during January-June period of tally):
- Jackson, Rochell - Partners and Crime (Allen & Unwin 2012) - true crime
- Moss, Tara - Assassin (HarperCollins 2012)
- Nunn, Malla - The Silent Valley (Pan Macmillan 2012)
- Tranter, Kirsten - A Common Loss (HarperCollins 2012); reviews posted on "Literary" page.
- Trope, Nicole - The Boy Under The Table (Allen & Unwin 2012)
Malla Nunn's Silent Valley should be included here and I think could fall under literary crime.
ReplyDeleteI'm writing a review for Cold Grave, Kathryn Fox's newest book right now.
Thanks, Shelleyrae. I think I should just ask you directly!
ReplyDeleteElisabeth do you include Suspense/Thrillers here? If you do you should include:
ReplyDeleteThe Boy Under The Table by Nicole Trope
It great to see how much Australian Crime is out on the shelves, Elizabeth, and well done for keeping the focus on such wonderful writers. I agree with Shelleyrae that Malla Nunn's Silent Valley belongs here and I think she would also belong on the literary list. Her stories transcend genres with their beautiful prose and memorable characters. I have another review to post on Silent Valley - just as soon as I get time!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time to stop by and comment, Helene. And thanks for being a wonderful participant in the challenge. I haven't read any books by Malla Nunn, but I'm looking forward to it. I'll add her to both lists.
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