Saturday, June 17, 2023

Irish James Kelman: ‘Irish writers get cushy jobs because they never challenge a single damn thing’

 Ask Kate Reid, the former Formula One aerospace engineer who simply set out to create the perfect croissant. She is now the queen of the damn-near-close-to-perfect croissant, sent out daily through her Lune bakeries.

Sourdough may be a star carb but watch the ingredients


An anecdote from 1983 about algorithmic perfection and hard-boiled eggs. "The most obvious and absolutely correct algorithm may be wrong and even harmful if it works under incorrect assumptions."


 Story about hard-boiled eggs - A cautionary tale about algorithmic perfection?


     James Kelman profile 


       In the Irish Times Éamon Sweeney profiles James Kelman: ‘Irish writers get cushy jobs because they never challenge a single damn thing’ [updated: which, as a reader points out is actually from quite a few years back ! -- but still of interest]
       Apparently the Booker Prize winner "currently doesn't have a publisher" -- and he notes:
When it came to 1994 and the Booker Prize, the Director of Dillon's said they wouldn't stock it. They were the second largest bookseller after Waterstone's at the time. I've been on Random House and Penguin, but no one publishes me at the moment. I can't blame them, because I used to be a salesman.
       (Of course, we know what became of Dillon's .....) 



Discover all the winning novels since 1996

the Women’s Prize for Fiction has recognized and celebrated the best fiction by women writers around the world. Bestselling novelist and playwright Kate Mosse founded the UK-based award to champion women in the male-dominated awards scene. Despite writing 60% of books published, by 1992 only 10% of authors shortlisted for the Booker Prize were women. While representation of women and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) authors on award lists has improved, the Women’s Prize for Fiction continues to play a crucial role in shining a spotlight on outstanding writers. Past winners include Zadie SmithCarol ShieldsAli Smith, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Barbara Kingsolver has won the 2023 Women’s Prize for Fiction for Demon Copperhead, making her the first double winner of the Women’s Prize for Fiction in its 28 year history. An exposé of modern America, Demon Copperhead tackles universal themes, from addiction, poverty, family, love and the power of art and friendship.”