Written in clean and simple, but also subtly suggestive, prose it tells of Edith Hope, a romantic novelist on a "curious interlude in her life". It is actually one that should be admired and enjoyed. The sense of outraged justice created by the perception that Hotel du Lac usurped Ballard's crown is unfortunate. Both from the point of view that Empire Of The Sun is so very good, but also because of the anger her victory provoked. The New Statesman said it was "pretentious" although did at least do Brookner the kindness of noting that "it wasn't her fault that she won the prize." The author herself half-apologised that her books are "quite nice but unimportant" and suggested it might have been better if Empire Of The Sun had won in its place. Malcolm Bradbury called her winning novel, Hotel du Lac, "parochial", and thundered that it was not the sort of book that should have won the Booker. Even at the time it annoyed plenty of critics and Anita Brookner, the writer lucky-unlucky enough to be chosen in his place, took a lot of stick. A quarter-century on, this failure to reward greatness seems a travesty. Not – most notably – for Empire Of The Sun. One of the strange anomalies in the Booker's long and (reasonably) exalted history is the fact that JG Ballard never won it.
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