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Big Jubilee Read

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List of 70 books

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The Big Jubilee Read is a 2022 campaign to promote reading for pleasure and to celebrate thePlatinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II. A list of 70 books byCommonwealth authors, 10 from each decade ofElizabeth II's reign, was selected by a panel of experts and announced by theBBC andThe Reading Agency on 18 April 2022.[1][2][3]

Selection process

[edit]

An initial long-list was compiled from readers' suggestions, and a panel of librarians, booksellers and "literature specialists" made the choice of 70 titles, aiming "to engage all readers in the discovery and celebration of great books". The project received funding from theArts Council and is supported byLibraries Connected[4] and theBooksellers Association.[3]

The organisers hope that the project will "celebrate the joy of reading and the power that it has to connect people across the country and among nations".[5] Nineteen of the books are winners of theBooker Prize.[6] Most of the books are novels written in English, but there are also poetry collections such asDeath of a Naturalist and short story collections includingThe Boat, whileOne Moonlit Night was published in Welsh asUn Nos Ola Leuad,Le Procès-Verbal andOur Lady of the Nile were originally in French, andShuggie Bain is in English but with dialogue inScots.[7][8][9][10]

The list

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The list was published by the BBC on 18 April 2022.[11]

TitleAuthorYearCountry
(as stated in official list)
The Palm-Wine DrinkardAmos Tutuola1952 Nigeria
The Hills Were Joyful TogetherRoger Mais1953 Jamaica
In the Castle of My SkinGeorge Lamming1953 Barbados
My Bones and My FluteEdgar Mittelholzer1955 Guyana
The Lonely LondonersSam Selvon1956 Trinidad and Tobago
 England
The GuideR. K. Narayan1958 India
To Sir, With LoveE. R. Braithwaite1959 Guyana
One Moonlit NightCaradog Prichard1961 Wales
A House for Mr BiswasV. S. Naipaul1961 Trinidad and Tobago
 England
Sunlight on a Broken ColumnAttia Hosain1961 India
A Clockwork OrangeAnthony Burgess1962 England
The InterrogationJ. M. G. Le Clézio1963 France
 Mauritius
The Girls of Slender MeansMuriel Spark1963 Scotland
Arrow of GodChinua Achebe1964 Nigeria
Death of a NaturalistSeamus Heaney1966Northern Ireland
Wide Sargasso SeaJean Rhys1966 Dominica
 Wales
A Grain of WheatNgũgĩ wa Thiong'o1967 Kenya
Picnic at Hanging RockJoan Lindsay1967 Australia
The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet BornAyi Kwei Armah1968 Ghana
When Rain Clouds GatherBessie Head1968 Botswana
 South Africa
The Nowhere ManKamala Markandaya1972 India
Tinker Tailor Soldier SpyJohn Le Carré1974 England
The Thorn BirdsColleen McCullough1977 Australia
The Crow EatersBapsi Sidhwa1978 Pakistan
The Sea, the SeaIris Murdoch1978 England
Who Do You Think You Are?Alice Munro1978 Canada
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the GalaxyDouglas Adams1979 England
TsotsiAthol Fugard1980 South Africa
Clear Light of DayAnita Desai1980 India
Midnight's ChildrenSalman Rushdie1981 England
 India
Schindler's ArkThomas Keneally1982 Australia
Beka LambZee Edgell1982 Belize
The Bone PeopleKeri Hulme1984 New Zealand
The Handmaid's TaleMargaret Atwood1985 Canada
Summer LightningOlive Senior1986 Jamaica
The Whale RiderWiti Ihimaera1987 New Zealand
The Remains of the DayKazuo Ishiguro1989 England
OmerosDerek Walcott1990 Saint Lucia
The Adoption PapersJackie Kay1991 Scotland
CloudstreetTim Winton1991 Australia
The English PatientMichael Ondaatje1992 Canada
 Sri Lanka
The Stone DiariesCarol Shields1993 Canada
ParadiseAbdulrazak Gurnah1994 Tanzania
 England
A Fine BalanceRohinton Mistry1995 India
 Canada
SaltEarl Lovelace1996 Trinidad and Tobago
The God of Small ThingsArundhati Roy1997 India
The Blue BedspreadRaj Kamal Jha1999 India
DisgraceJ. M. Coetzee1999 South Africa
 Australia
White TeethZadie Smith2000 England
Life of PiYann Martel2001 Canada
Small IslandAndrea Levy2004 England
The Secret RiverKate Grenville2005 Australia
The Book ThiefMarkus Zusak2005 Australia
Half of a Yellow SunChimamanda Ngozi Adichie2006 Nigeria
A Golden AgeTahmima Anam2007 Bangladesh
The BoatNam Le2008 Australia
Wolf HallHilary Mantel2009 England
The Book of Night WomenMarlon James2009 Jamaica
The Memory of LoveAminatta Forna2010 Sierra Leone
 Scotland
ChinamanShehan Karunatilaka2010 Sri Lanka
Our Lady of the NileScholastique Mukasonga2012 Rwanda
The LuminariesEleanor Catton2013 New Zealand
Behold the DreamersImbolo Mbue2016 Cameroon
The Bone ReadersJacob Ross2016 Grenada
How We DisappearedJing-Jing Lee2019 Singapore
Girl, Woman, OtherBernardine Evaristo2019 England
The Night TigerYangsze Choo2019 Malaysia
Shuggie BainDouglas Stuart2020 Scotland
A Passage NorthAnuk Arudpragasam2021 Sri Lanka
The PromiseDamon Galgut2021 South Africa

Commonwealth nations by number of books

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Where an author is given two countries of origin in the above list, 0.5 is given to each country.

CountryBooksPopulation
(millions, 2022)
 England1168
 Australia7.526
 India71,417
 Canada539
 Scotland3.55.5
 Jamaica33.0
 New Zealand35.1
 Nigeria3218
 Sri Lanka2.522
 Guyana20.8
 Trinidad and Tobago21.4
 Wales1.53.2
 Grenada10.1
 Saint Lucia10.2
 Barbados10.3
 Belize10.4
 Northern Ireland11.9
 Singapore15.6
 Rwanda114
 Cameroon128
 Malaysia133
 Kenya157
 Bangladesh1169
 Pakistan1231
 Dominica0.50.1
 Mauritius0.51.3
 Botswana0.52.3
 Sierra Leone0.58.4
 Ghana0.533
 Tanzania0.564
 France[a]0.566
  1. ^Not a Commonwealth nation.

Omissions and other issues

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Commentators discussed several omissions of potential titles:J. R. R. Tolkien'sThe Lord of the Rings (ranked number 1 in the 2003The Big Read);J. K. Rowling'sHarry Potter books;[12]Terry Pratchett'sDiscworld series;[13]Philip Pullman'sHis Dark Materials trilogy,[14]Doris Lessing'sThe Golden Notebook;[12] and the work ofDick Francis, reportedly one of the Queen's favourite authors.[14] The inclusion of Northern Irish writerSeamus Heaney was explained by the fact that when he wroteDeath of a Naturalist he was living in the UK and published by an English publisher; Heaney identified as anIrish nationalist and had previously objected to his inclusion inThe Penguin Book of Contemporary British Poetry.[15][16]

InThe Telegraph,Allison Pearson called it a"'You'll take your medicine and like it' kind of list compiled by people who were scared stiff of not being diverse enough."[17] Similarly, inThe Article, David Herman complained: "If you likeHornblower orJames Bond, witches and hobbits, great children's literature, popular poetry or drama, The Big Jubilee Read doesn't care. What it does care about ispost-colonial, ideally non-white, literature."[18]

References

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  1. ^Lambert, Doug (17 April 2022)."BBC Arts announce titles for the Big Jubilee Read".ATV Today. Retrieved18 April 2022.
  2. ^"The Reading Agency and BBC Arts launch national reading campaign to mark Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II's Platinum Jubilee".readingagency.org.uk. Reading Agency. Retrieved18 April 2022.
  3. ^ab"The Big Jubilee Read". The Reading Agency. Retrieved18 April 2022.Includes list of titles with images of covers
  4. ^"Libraries from home".www.librariesconnected.org.uk. Libraries Connected. Retrieved24 April 2022.Libraries Connected is proud to support The Reading Agency and BBC Arts' Big Jubilee Read
  5. ^Bayley, Sian (1 March 2022)."Reading Agency launches The Big Jubilee Read".The Bookseller. Retrieved18 April 2022.
  6. ^"The Big Jubilee Read x The Booker Prize".thebookerprizes.com. The Booker Prizes. Retrieved18 April 2022.
  7. ^"Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart".ANGELINE KING. 1 December 2020.
  8. ^Wade, Mike (17 May 2021)."Douglas Stuart's Glasgow is changing fast. Will Shuggie Bain feel at home?".The Times.
  9. ^"Bahoochie". 26 August 2021.
  10. ^Guinness, Emma (25 January 2022)."Modern Scots language should be celebrated the same as Robert Burns".The National.
  11. ^"A literary celebration of Queen Elizabeth II's record-breaking reign".BBC. 17 April 2022. Retrieved18 April 2022.The full list
  12. ^abSherwood, Harriet (18 April 2022)."The God of Small Things to Shuggie Bain: the Queen's jubilee book list".The Guardian. Retrieved19 April 2022.
  13. ^Power, Ed (18 April 2022)."The fantasy-free Platinum Jubilee reading list is pure literary snobbery".The Telegraph. Retrieved19 April 2022.
  14. ^abGriffiths, Sian (17 April 2022)."The Big Jubilee Read — 70 books fit for Queen and country".The Times. Retrieved19 April 2022.
  15. ^Reid, Kurtis (18 April 2022)."Seamus Heaney's work to be included as part of Queen's platinum jubilee books".Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved19 April 2022.
  16. ^McClements, Freya (19 December 2020)."'My passport's green': why was Seamus Heaney used in Northern Ireland branding?".The Irish Times.
  17. ^Pearson, Allison (21 April 2022)."The real best reads of Her Majesty's reign".The Telegraph.
  18. ^Herman, David (26 April 2022)."What went wrong with the Big Jubilee Read?".TheArticle.

External links

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  • "Big Jubilee Read". The Reading Agency.Lists of titles, by decade, with cover image for each title and a paragraph about the decade in Commonwealth literature; links to a book description for every title
George III
Golden Jubilee (1809)
Victoria
Golden Jubilee (1887)
Diamond Jubilee (1897)
George V
Silver Jubilee (1935)
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Ruby Jubilee (1992)
Golden Jubilee (2002)
Diamond Jubilee (2012)
Sapphire Jubilee (2017)
Platinum Jubilee (2022)
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