Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction

Search site

  • home
  • 2009 Prize
  • about the Prize
  • news and events
  • Award for New Writers
  • for reading groups
  • 2008 winner
  • 2008 Award
  • Award winners
  • entry rules
  • Award history
  • Winner - Orange Broadband Award for New Writers 2008

    Joanna Kavenna for Inglorious

    orange inglorious

    Joanna Kavenna
    Joanna Kavenna's website
    (links open in new windows)
    orange arrowwww.joannakavenna.com

    read reviews of Inglorious
    orange arrowThe Guardian
    orange arrow The Telegraph

    orange arrowread an extract

    Press coverage
    (links open in new windows)

    orange arrowthe BBC

    orange arrowThe Guardian

    orange arrowThe Times

    orange arrowThe Telegraph

    orange arrowNew York Times

    orange arrowKate Mosse in the Independent

    orange arrowThe Big Question in the Independent

    ___

    orange arrowwatch the award ceremony video and listen to the speeches

    orange arrowlisten to the shortlisted authors' event
    recorded at London's Southbank on 2 June 2008

    orange arrowread celebrity reviews of the Prize shortlist

    orange arrowlisten to the shortlisted authors read their work
    as well as interviews with the judges

    orange arrowfind out more about the Prize shortlist

    orange arrowfind out more about the Award for New Writers shortlist

     

  • Inglorious

    Rosa Lane is a dynamic journalist in her thirties, already the picture of London achievement. Her handsome boyfriend is something in politics and her other friends are confident, prosperous and ambitious. But one afternoon soon after the death of her mother, staring at her computer screen at work, she fails to see the point, walks out of her job – and begins her long fall from modern grace.

    Within days, this smart, educated woman is dependent on the patience and charity of her friends. She soon finds that most of them – especially her best friend – are far less supportive than she had imagined. What's more, she simply cannot understand their beliefs and desires anymore.

    What happens next is comic and unbearable, as Rosa tries to find work, to wade through the great literature that she has never read (and never will), to appease her bank manager and to feel the excitement of a hopeless affair. When she visits old friends in the Lakes, she descends into a pit of benevolent, fecund domesticity. Meanwhile, he ex and his unctuous lover announce their marriage…

     

    Joanna Kavenna

    had, by the age of 24, written seven apparently unpublishable novels, as well as a doctorate. She spent some years trying to make a living by freelance writing, combining this with disastrous stints as an amanuensis.

    Eventually, exile seemed the best option, so she spent some years living in America, Germany, Scandinavia and France. This habit for nervous travel eventually produced her first published book, The Ice Museum, after which she lived in Paris and London while writing Inglorious, which is her first novel.

    Joanna Kavenna's q & a

    What sparked Inglorious?
    I wanted to take one ordinary person -– a woman called Rosa Lane – and send her on a kind of mock-heroic quest for meaning, for a way to live happily and freely in the modern world. I wanted to write about how hard it is to find your own way, to resist the expectations of society and those around you.

    I was interested, too, in what happens when you stop desiring what you're told to desire, and what others around you appear to desire - where you go, what you do, who condemns you and who seeks to understand you... Rosa is acutely aware that she is a 'mute, inglorious Milton' – hence the title – she is not being hailed as a great intellect or sage; no one is eagerly awaiting her conclusions on hoary philosophical questions such as 'Why Live?' 'What should I do with my span of years?' 'What constitutes a good life?' Yet she insists on asking these questions, and striving towards her own answers.


    Where and when is the novel set?
    It's set in the present day, mostly in West London – that area north of Ladbroke Grove, which mingles extraordinary wealth with grimy housing estates and industrial landscapes that look half-bombed. I've lived there at various points, and it's an area I love to walk around. I'm always intrigued by the severity of the contrasts, by the brutal Trellick Tower rising above the immaculate Georgian terraces, the collision of grandeur and desperation. And there's the incessant motion of the Westway, the commuter trains rattling along overground tracks. Rosa is turning circles in this area of London, until she finally manages to escape to stay with friends in the Lake District -– that journey precipitates the final crisis of the book, and causes her finally to act.

    Do you have a favourite character in the novel?
    I have a lot of affection for Rosa herself. I wanted to create a 'warts and all' portrait – so she is at times charming, self-knowing, relatively lucid, and yet she is also irresolute, idle and sometimes plain infuriating. She has stepped out of a life in which everything had become comfortable and familiar, so she is by turns hopeful, terrified, despairing, and then suddenly aware of the inherent absurdity of her situation. I hoped the reader would often find her funny, in a dark comedy kind of way.

    What's your favourite children's book and why?
    There are many, but Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising books are really wonderful. Cooper took the Arthurian legend and recast it beautifully – retaining all the complexity of figures such as Merlin yet drawing them into the childhood world of holidays where time is stretched, and mysterious elderly relatives preside over dusty ancient houses, and dream and reality merge – terrifying and alluring at the same time.

    your comments

    You can comment on this article, but you need to be logged in. Log in below or register by following the link.

    I have just finished this book and the only thing that I can complain about is the cover of my edition - a broken ceramic poodle and a design that makes it look like chic-lit which it is not. An excellent book which goes into areas of life where weall have been whether male or female (perhaps I am just in touch with my feminine side!) Rosa is a great character and represents a lot of our human hopes ,fears, desires, etc etc the key issue being Why? and whilst none of us can answer many of the questions that Rosa presents it is a great analysis of the human condition- go buy it!!! The only point that I would make is that it was all wrapped up very quickly and I love dogs but oh that poodle!!!!!!!!

    JAZZIEB

    Aug 15th, 2008 at 16:26:28 hrs

    I really enjoyed this book and am looking forward to new releases from Joanna. Thanks, Rod.

    rod

    Dec 17th, 2008 at 10:31:11 hrs

    Inglorious has to be the best book of the year in my opinion. I absolutely love this book. Thanks for writing such a fabulous book, CDJ.

    CDJ

    Dec 17th, 2008 at 12:16:09 hrs

    My favorite book as a child was "The Little Buddha Statue"... very enchanting, I will be reading it to my own children in a couple of years.

    martahobbs

    Nov 3rd, 2008 at 13:31:21 hrs

    My favorite book as a child was Searching for Candlestick Park by Peg Kehret and S. Marchesi, a great book for kids, if a little obscure!

    katiecunningham

    Nov 4th, 2008 at 17:08:20 hrs

    The book is beautifully written and is a very accurate description of what it's like to wander around without direction - metaphorically and literally. I thought I would enjoy this book as I can relate to this state - the narrator has many plans but as she doesn't know what she wants she gets nothing done, my bookmark is around 3 quarters of the way through and I doubt I shall finish this book.

    Rebecca

    Oct 11th, 2008 at 22:26:30 hrs

    The book is beautifully written and is a very accurate description of what it's like to wander around without direction - metaphorically and literally. I thought I would enjoy this book as I can relate to this state - the narrator has many plans but as she doesn't know what she wants she gets nothing done, my bookmark is around 3 quarters of the way through and I doubt I shall finish this book.

    Rebecca

    Oct 11th, 2008 at 22:27:14 hrs

    Joanna Kavenna is definitely someone to watch.

    Pauline

    Oct 11th, 2008 at 23:55:20 hrs

    Inglorious is an amazing book, I took it on vacation with me to Orlando and it has to be said is one of my favorite books of all time.

    Rebecca

    Oct 16th, 2008 at 21:58:03 hrs

    This is a great book, I really enjoyed reading it, it reminded me a little of the diving regulator by Charles Kawofski, a great book if you ever get time to read it. As others have mentioned the cover is a little misleading, but that is hardly an issue.

    Clair

    Oct 24th, 2008 at 13:44:57 hrs

    This is a great book going into aspects of life which we all have have to deal with at some point. I particularly enjoyed Rosa's character and really identified with her hopes and fears for the future. Great read... glad to see it lispd here! spd

    zoe

    Oct 30th, 2008 at 11:11:07 hrs

    I also like Rosa, she is an interesting character, but one which is familliar to most of us in some respects... a typical citezen of the times, dissatisfied, looking for meaning in her life but ultimately a procrastinator!

    Carol D

    Oct 8th, 2008 at 21:07:18 hrs

    This is such a cliche but I loved Lord of the Rings as a child. I am sure that if I were growing up today I would have been a cheap harry potter fan! It was not until I was older that I took a more serious interest in literature.

    Carol D

    Oct 8th, 2008 at 21:49:06 hrs

    This is such a cliche but I loved Lord of the Rings as a child. I am sure that if I were growing up today I would have been a cheap harry potter fan! It was not until I was older that I took a more serious interest in literature.

    Carol D

    Oct 8th, 2008 at 21:50:09 hrs

    I'm always staring at my Laptop I wonder what will become of me?

    Jones

    Oct 9th, 2008 at 13:44:07 hrs

    log in



    Not joined yet? Join now

  • Orange winners

    another book

about Orange orange bullet news orange bullet press area orange bullet libraries orange bullet faqs orange bullet sign up