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"The Booker Prize Podcast" hosted by Jo Hamya and James Walton will launch on 6th July. The new weekly podcast will cast a fresh eye over some of the 500+ novels previously nominated, as well as peering behind the curtain of the latest prizes.
It will feature lively discussion and comment, and interviews with authors and many others who take a keen interest in modern fiction.
Hosted by novelist and critic Hamya and critic and broadcaster Walton, the podcast will delve into the history of the Booker Prizes. The hosts will explore the shortlists and ceremonies from years gone by and some of the Booker’s more controversial moments.
The conversations will be wide-ranging, covering the novels’ historical context, as well as how they relate to other books, writers, current events and other art forms. The hosts will also provide insight and opinion around the current prize seasons.
Each 45-minute episode will focus on a single topic, divided between "deep dives" into individual books from the Booker Library, and discussions about popular book genres and topical issues. Listeners will get an insight into the decisions and legacy of the Booker and International Booker Prizes.
As well as featuring special guests, episodes will include a recurring Booker Clinic segment, where listeners will be invited to send in their personal dilemmas.
Head of editorial for the Booker Prize Foundation Paul Davies said: "The new ’Booker Prize Podcast’ is the next step in the Booker’s digital evolution. Over the past two years, we have expanded beyond our annual prizes to become a year-round editorial destination for high-quality, engaging content for book lovers through our website, newsletters and social platforms.
"We’re delighted to be working with our two brilliant hosts, Jo and James, who will enrich our reading lives and show readers of all kinds that Booker-nominated books, old and new, can be accessible, relevant and essential reads."
In the first episode, titled "The Best Booker Books of All Time (Maybe)", the hosts will get to know each other over their favourite books from the Booker Library, and debate whether No One is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood (Bloomsbury Circus) could have won the 2021 Booker Prize, and why Patrick McCabe’s 1992 Booker-shortlisted The Butcher Boy (Picador) is a novel worth reading.
In the second episode, "Introducing July’s Book of the Month: The Vegetarian by Han Kang", the hosts will explore the first individual book to win the International Booker Prize, whether its main character is "mad" or not, and the controversy surrounding the novel’s translation.
Episodes will be released by The Booker Prizes every Thursday morning and are available on all podcast platforms, including Apple and Spotify.
"The Booker Prize Podcast" and the books and topics discussed are selected to complement the editorial activity across the Booker Prizes’ digital platforms. The podcast forms an additional pillar alongside the regular editorial content featured on the website, social channels and newsletter.
The content in the podcast will support and be supported by essays, reading lists and recommendations across all channels where listeners are encouraged to join the conversation and share their views.
Hamya said: "In these early stages, it’s been great fun to disagree with roughly half of everything James says and an even greater joy to discover our common ground, or else bring each other round to a new point of view. The Booker Prizes have given us wonderful scope to approach their history and library: my hope is that our podcast is a nuanced, candid, and an easy place to spend time. I can’t wait for listeners to think and gossip with us."
Walton added: "There’s no denying that Jo and I were thrown together by Booker in a strange kind of blind date. But even after the first recording it felt surprisingly clear that they must have known what they were doing, because working together is proving a joy: informative, stimulating and, most of all, fun. I much look forward to being joined by our listeners who will no doubt keep us on our toes."