The Booker Prize Winner List

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June 27, 2025

The Booker Prize Winner List

The following is a list of all the Booker Prize Winners. To include all the short and longlisted entries, the ... Read more

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Photo of the cover of the book Orbital

Orbital – a near earth tour-de-force (or a disappointing novella as novel)?

Join six astronauts as they orbit Earth in Orbital by Samantha Harvey, a beautifully written, Booker-winning novel that explores time, grief, and perspective. Dreamlike and meditative, it’s a quiet yet powerful reflection on life above—and far removed from—the world. Perfect for readers who love fiction that lingers.

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In Ascension Book Review - Photograph of the book cover.

In Ascension Book Review – an uneven attempt at great genre-busting literary science fiction

In Ascension is an ambitious blend of deep-sea science and speculative space fiction. While beautifully written in parts, I found its inconsistencies distracting. A bold but flawed Booker-longlisted novel.

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Troubles Book Review - - photograph of the cover of the book

Troubles Book Review – a darkly comic look at English decline and colonial arrogance

A darkly comic tale of decay and denial, Troubles by J.G. Farrell follows a shell-shocked English major adrift in a crumbling Irish hotel after WWI. Lyrical, satirical and quietly devastating, it’s a Booker Prize winner that lingers long after the final page.

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The Elected Member Book Review - photograph of the cover of the book

The Elected Member Book Review – a vivid exploration of mental health and cultural expectation

A darkly comic and quietly devastating portrait of mental illness, family pressure, and religious identity, The Elected Member by Bernice Rubens begins with a breakdown and spirals inward. This Booker-winning novel explores how brilliance can become a burden—and how love can distort.

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Something to Answer For Book Review - photograph of the cover of the book

The First Booker, Something to Answer For Book Review – decline and collapse in Suez

P.H. Newby’s Something to Answer For won the very first Booker Prize in 1969, but it’s largely forgotten today. Set during the Suez Crisis, this surreal and absorbing novel explores identity, colonial decline, and quiet disintegration — and it’s well worth rediscovering.

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