Young Writer of the Year Award: Shortlist Reviews and Predictions

Being on the shadow panel for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award was a bookish highlight of 2017 for me. I’m pleased for this year’s shadow panelists, a couple of whom are blogging friends (one I’ve met IRL), to have had the same opportunity, and I look forward to attending the prize ceremony at the London Library on December 5th.

 

I happened to have already read two of the shortlisted titles, the poetry collection The Perseverance by Raymond Antrobus and the debut novel Stubborn Archivist by Yara Rodrigues Fowler, which was one of my specific wishes/predictions. The kind folk of FMcM Associates sent me the other two shortlisted books, a short story collection and another debut novel, for blog reviews so that I could follow along with the shadow panel’s deliberations.

 

Salt Slow by Julia Armfield (2019)

These nine short stories are steeped in myth and magic, but often have a realistic shell. Only gradually do the fantastical or dystopian elements emerge, with the final paragraph delivering a delicious surprise. For instance, the narrator of “Mantis” attends a Catholic girls’ school and is caught up in a typical cycle of self-loathing and obsessing over boys. It’s only at the very end that we realize her extreme skin condition is actually a metamorphosis that enables her to protect herself. The settings are split between the city and the seaside; the perspective is divided almost perfectly down the middle between the first and third person. The body is a site of transformation, or a source of grotesque relics, as in “The Collectables,” in which a PhD student starts amassing body parts she could only have acquired via grave-robbing.

Two favorites for me were “Formerly Feral,” in which a 13-year-old girl acquires a wolf as a stepsister and increasingly starts to resemble her; and the final, title story, a post-apocalyptic one in which a man and a pregnant woman are alone in a fishing boat, floating above a drowned world and living as if outside of time. This one is really rather terrifying. I also liked “Cassandra After,” in which a dead girlfriend comes back – it reminded me of Margaret Atwood’s The Robber Bride, which I’m currently reading for #MARM. “Stop Your Women’s Ears with Wax,” about a girl group experiencing Beatles-level fandom on a tour of the UK, felt like the odd one out to me in this collection.

Armfield’s prose is punchy, with invented verbs and condensed descriptions that just plain work: “Jenny had taken to poltergeisting round the house”; “skin like fork-clawed cottage cheese,” “the lobster shells gleam a slick vermilion” and “The sky is gory with stars.” There’s no shortage of feminist fantasy stories out there nowadays – Aimee Bender, Kelly Link, Carmen Maria Machado and Karen Russell are just a few others working in this vein – but the writing in Salt Slow really grabbed me even when the plots didn’t. I’ll be following Armfield’s career with interest.

 

Testament by Kim Sherwood (2018)

Eva Butler is a 24-year-old MA student specializing in documentary filmmaking. She is a live-in carer for her grandfather, the painter Joseph Silk (real name: József Zyyad), in his Fitzroy Park home. When Silk dies early on in the book, she realizes that she knows next to nothing about his past in Hungary. Learning that he wrote a testament about his Second World War experiences for the Jewish Museum in Berlin, she goes at once to read it and is distressed at what she finds. With the help of Felix, the museum’s curator, who did his PhD on Silk’s work, she travels to Budapest to track down the truth about her family.

Sherwood alternates between Eva’s quest and a recreation of József’s time in wartorn Europe. Cleverly, she renders the past sections more immediate by writing them in the present tense, whereas Eva’s first-person narrative is in the past tense. Although József escaped the worst of the Holocaust by being sentenced to forced labor instead of going to a concentration camp, his brother László and their friend Zuzka were in Theresienstadt, so readers get a more complete picture of the Jewish experience at the time. All three wind up in the Lake District after the war, rebuilding their lives and making decisions that will affect future generations.

It’s almost impossible to write anything new about the Holocaust these days, and overfamiliarity was certainly a roadblock for me here. I was especially reminded of Julie Orringer’s The Invisible Bridge, what with its focus on the Hungarian Jewish experience. However, I did appreciate the way Sherwood draws on her family history – her grandmother is a Hungarian Holocaust survivor – to consider how trauma still affects the second and third generation. This certainly doesn’t feel like a debut novel. It’s highly readable, and the emotional power of the story cannot be denied. The Young Writer of the Year Award is great for highlighting books that risk being overlooked: in a year dominated by The Testaments, poor Testament was otherwise likely to sink without notice.

Note: “Testament” is also the title of the poem written by Sherwood’s great-grandfather that she recited at her grandfather’s funeral – just as Eva does in the novel. It opens this Telegraph essay (paywalled, but reprinted in the paperback of Testament) that Sherwood wrote about her family history.

 

General thoughts and predictions:

Any of these books would be a worthy winner. However, as Raymond Antrobus has already won this year’s £30,000 Rathbones Folio Prize as well as the 2018 Geoffrey Dearmer Award from the Poetry Society, The Perseverance has had sufficient recognition – plus it’s a woman’s turn. Testament is accomplished, and likely to hold the widest appeal, but it strikes me as the safe choice. Salt Slow would be an edgier selection, and feels quite timely and fresh. But Stubborn Archivist has stuck with me since I reviewed it in March. I called it “Knausgaard for the Sally Rooney generation” and wrote that “the last book to have struck me as truly ‘novel’ in the same way was Lincoln in the Bardo.” From a glance at the shadow panel’s reviews thus far, I fear it may prove too divisive for them, though.

Based on my gut instincts and a bit of canny thinking about the shadow panelists and judges, here are my predictions:

Shadow Panel:

  • What they will pick: Testament [but they might surprise me and go with Salt Slow or Stubborn Archivist]
  • What they should pick: Salt Slow

Official Judging Panel:

  • What they will pick: Stubborn Archivist [but they might surprise me and go with Salt Slow]
  • What they should pick: Stubborn Archivist

I understand that the shadow panel is meeting today for their in-person deliberations. I wish them luck! Their pick will be announced on the 28th. I’ll be intrigued to see which book they select, and how it compares with the official winner on December 5th.

 

Have you read anything from this year’s shortlist?

18 responses

  1. I felt the same way about Testament – much too familiar for me to back it for this prize, although Sherwood writes well. I haven’t actually read the other three books (though I heard Antrobus perform some of the poems from his collection) but from all the good things I’ve heard about them, they seem like more interesting picks. Poor Sherwood, though – Testament must have been finalised as a title just before Atwood announced The Testaments!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I wondered if you knew any of these. I would highly recommend the Fowler; the Armfield you again might find too familiar, though I thought it worthwhile.

      I imagine Sherwood was wedded to her title no matter what, since it’s the title of her great-grandfather’s poem, which was clearly very important to her.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hmmmm, I see your point but as a writer, I’d have been worried!

        I’ve been dithering over Salt Slow. As you say, it sounds a lot like other things I’ve read but when that kind of writing is good, it’s REALLY good, so I might try some of the stories.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. To my shame, I still haven’t got around to reading anything from the shortlist and suspect I won’t now before the announcement despite being keen to read Salt Slow and Stubborn Archivist in particular.

    Sadly, I don’t think I’m going to be able to make the prize-giving but let’s try and meet somehow next year.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I think you’ll really enjoy those two.

      That would be lovely!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. I’m certainly interested in The Stubborn Archivist, and because of Orringer’s Invisible Bridge, The Testament too. I’m really going to have to get over myself though and stop avoiding books where any mention of ‘dystopian’ is made.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Dystopia is hard to avoid nowadays!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yeah. Don’t have to read all about it too though 😉

        Like

  4. The Stubborn Archivist is next on my pile and I’m so looking forward to it, I love experimental styles in novels. From what I’ve read, it feels like a potential winner. I haven’t read any of the four, although I bought the Antrobus after he won the Folio. Sadly I can’t make the prize-giving this year, but hope you have a lovely evening, but say hello from me.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I think you’ll love it. Oh, too bad — we’ll miss you this year. (I’d better check there’s at least one other person I know who’s going; otherwise, I won’t bother with the train fare and will go to book club instead!)

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      1. I’m going! [waves]

        Liked by 1 person

    2. Yay! See you there 🙂 I imagine at least Eric will be there, too — he goes to everything!

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  5. From what you’ve said here, The Stubborn Archivist sounds the most appealing to me. But the cover of Salt Slow is so pretty!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Definitely one of my favourite covers of the year. I’m eagerly awaiting the shadow panel’s announcement of their winner tomorrow.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. […] Salt Slow by Julia Armfield: Nine short stories steeped in myth and magic. The body is a site of transformation, or a source of grotesque relic. Armfield’s prose is punchy, with invented verbs and condensed descriptions that just plain work. She was the Young Writer of the Year Award shadow panel winner. I’ll be following her career with interest. […]

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  7. […] of magic realism and gentle horror, this is a book for fans of Salt Slow and The Doll’s […]

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  8. […] to have the word “Salt” in them. Of the few examples he mentioned, I’ve read and enjoyed Salt Slow by Julia Armfield, which was on the Young Writer of the Year Award shortlist last year. The […]

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  9. […] loved Armfield’s 2019 short story collection Salt Slow, which I reviewed when it was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award. Her […]

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