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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Alison Flood

Orange prize for fiction 2010: the longlist

Orange Prize for Fiction: Rosie Alison The Very Thought of You
British debut novelist Rosie Alison has already made it onto this year's longlist for the Romantic Novel of the Year award; and now The Very Thought of You, her story of an eight-year-old evacuee sent to a Yorkshire estate during the second world war, has been longlisted for the Orange prize. Published by small independent press Alma Books, the novel sees the child drawn into the unravelling relationship of the estate's owners, childless couple Thomas and Elizabeth Ashton
Photograph: Alma Books
Orange Prize for Fiction: Eleanor Catton The Rehearsal
The second of seven debut novels on this year's longlist, New Zealander Eleanor Catton's The Rehearsal follows the consequences of a high-school sex scandal, which is made into a play by the local college
Read a review of The Rehearsal
Photograph: Granta
Orange Prize for Fiction: Clare Clark Savage Lands
Former Orange longlistee Clare Clark is in the running again with her third novel, Savage Lands. Set in the swamps of Louisiana in 1704, the book follows the story of Elisabeth Savaret, sent out from Paris to marry a man she has never met but with whom she falls passionately in love
Read a review of Savage Lands
Photograph: Harvill Secker
Orange Prize for Fiction: Amanda Craig Hearts and Minds
The Times's children's literature critic, Amanda Craig, makes the line-up for this year's Orange prize with her sixth novel, Hearts and Minds. Set amid London's immigrant population, from an illegal mini-cab driver from Zimbabwe to an exiled South African supply teacher and a 15-year-old girl trafficked into sexual slavery, the book traces how their lives are connected when a girl's body is found in Hampstead ponds
Read a review of Hearts and Minds
Photograph: Little Brown
Orange Prize for Fiction: Roopa Farooki The Way Things Look to Me
Pakistan-born Roopa Farooki, shortlisted for the Orange prize for new writers for her first novel, Bitter Sweets, is up for the main award for The Way Things Look to Me, the story of three siblings struggling to find their way after the death of their mother. Asif, 23, is forced to stay at home to look after his difficult youngest sister Yasmin, while Lila escapes to drift between jobs and men
Photograph: Pan Books
Orange Prize for Fiction: Rebecca Gowers The Twisted Heart
Another former Orange longlisted author, Rebecca Gowers, makes the line-up this year with The Twisted Heart, about a work-obsessed literature student who meets a mysterious man at a dance class
Read a review of The Twisted Heart
Photograph: Canongate
Orange Prize for Fiction: M.J. Hylan This is How Orange Prize for Fiction 2010
She's been shortlisted for the Man Booker prize, and now MJ Hyland is in with a chance at the Orange prize with her third novel, This is How, which follows the ever-darkening story of a man trying to build a new life after his fiancée ends their engagement
Read a review of This Is How
Photograph: Canongate
Orange Prize for Fiction: Sadie Jones Small Wars
Sadie Jones burst onto the literary scene with her debut, the Costa first novel award-winning The Outcast. Her second novel, Small Wars, sees soldier's wife Clara joining her husband on Cyprus as the islanders battle for union with Greece, and the British defend the colony
Read a review of Small Wars
Photograph: Chatto & Windus
Orange Prize for Fiction: Barbara Kingsolver The Lacuna
US author Barbara Kingsolver is longlisted for The Lacuna, her first novel in nine years. Told through the diaries and letters of Harrison Shepherd, born in the US but raised in Mexico, the novel sees Shepherd meet the muralist Diego Rivera, his wife Frida Kahlo and their guest, Leon Trotsky, going on to become a bestselling author in the US before being investigated as a subversive
Read a review of The Lacuna
Photograph: Faber and Faber
Orange Prize for Fiction: Laila Lalami Secret Son
Moroccan author Laila Lalami, another debut novelist, makes the Orange longlist for Secret Son, about a boy raised in a one-room house in the alleys of Casablanca who is taken in, aged 19, by his wealthy businessman father
Photograph: Viking
Orange Prize for Fiction: Andrea Levy The Long Song
Andrea Levy was catapulted to bestsellerdom with her fourth novel, Small Island, which won a host of prizes including the Orange. Her fifth, The Long Song, tells the story of slave girl July, who works on a sugar plantation in the 19th century
Read a review of The Long Song
Photograph: Headline Review
Orange Prize for Fiction: Attica Locke Black Water Rising
Screenwriter-turned-novelist Attica Locke is longlisted for Black Water Rising, about a lawyer who saves a woman from drowning on the Houston bayou only to be ensnared in a murder investigation which forces him to confront his radical past. The book is published by small press Serpent's Tail, which also published Lionel Shriver's Orange prize-winning We Need to Talk About Kevin
Read a review of Black Water Rising
Photograph: Serpent's Tail
Orange Prize for Fiction: Maria McCann The Wilding Orange Prize for Fiction 2010
British author Maria McCann makes the Orange running with The Wilding, set in the 17th century a generation after the English civil war. After cider-maker Jonathan Dymond's uncle dies, he is led to family secrets which have lain hidden since the war
Photograph: Faber and Faber
Orange Prize for Fiction: Hilary Mantel Wolf Hall Orange Prize for Fiction 2010
Hilary Mantel's Man Booker prize-winning Wolf Hall, set in the court of Henry VIII and tracing the rise of Thomas Cromwell, also makes the Orange longlist
Read a review of Wolf Hall
Photograph: Fourth Estate
Orange Prize for Fiction: Nadifa Mohamed Black Mamba Boy
Somalia-born British writer Nadifa Mohamed, another debut novelist, is longlisted for the 1935-set Black Mamba Boy, about a boy who embarks on an epic journey to find his father, through war-torn Eritrea, Sudan, Egypt and Palestine to Britain
Read a review of Black Mamba Boy
Photograph: HarperCollins
Orange Prize for Fiction: Lorrie Moore A Gate at the Stairs
American short story writer and novelist Lorrie Moore was chosen by the judges for her third novel, A Gate at the Stairs, which sees a college student take on the job of nanny to a wealthy couple looking to adopt, only to find herself drawn ever more deeply into the household's complicated life
Read a review of A Gate at the Stairs
Photograph: Faber and Faber
Orange Prize for Fiction: Monique Roffey The White Woman on the Green Bicycle Orange Prize Fiction
Spanish-born, British-educated Monique Roffey is longlisted for The White Woman on the Green Bicycle, her second novel and the story of a couple who arrive in Trinidad from England, where the wife, Sabine, becomes fixated on the leader of the country's new national party, Eric Williams
Photograph: Simon and Schuster
Orange Prize for Fiction: Amy Sackville The Still Point
Amy Sackville makes the Orange prize running for her debut, The Still Point. Published by small press Portobello Books, it tells the stories of Arctic explorer Edward Mackley's widow, who waits for decades for his return from the north pole, and of their great-great-niece Julia, who makes a discovery about her ancestors while struggling with her own marriage
Read a review of The Still Point
Photograph: Portobello Books
Orange Prize for Fiction: Kathryn Stockett The Help
The seventh and final debut novel on this year's Orange longlist, US writer Kathryn Stockett's The Help is set in 1962 Mississippi, telling the intertwining stories of a black maid, Aibileen, raising her 17th white child, and the 22-year-old Skeeter, who returns home seeking comfort from Constantine, the maid who raised her, only to discover she has gone
Read a review of The Help
Photograph: Fig Tree
Orange Prize for Fiction: Sarah Waters The Little Stranger
Twice shortlisted for the Man Booker and twice shortlisted for the Orange prize, Sarah Waters is longlisted this year for her ghost story The Little Stranger, set in a crumbling mansion in post-war Warwickshire
Read a review of The Little Stranger
Photograph: Virago
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