Books That Would Make My BTBA 2019 Shortlist If Only They Qualified [BTBA 2019]
Today’s Best Translated Book Award post is from Caitlin Baker of Ā in Seattle/Mercer Island. She’s also a frequent Two Month Review guest, and prolific .Ģż

As I get closer to narrowing down the stacks of books Iāve read this past year and finalizing my BTBA 2019 longlist, there are two books I wish could win, but since they were previously released/translated unfortunately they donāt qualify.
by Taeko Kono, translated from the Japanese by Lucy North originally released by New Directions in 1996 and reissued in October of last year. These stories, published in 1960s Japan uncover the secret lives and desires of seemingly average women.
This collection left me hungry for a biography of Kono and her life in post WWII Japan. Someone please write this book!

In by Willem Frederik Hermans a WWII Dutch soldier goes AWOL and discovers an empty house, or is it? Released by Archipelago last year in a new translation by David Colmer, this is an unsettling and novella about the insanity and absurdity of war. An Untouched House is an 88-page masterpiece.
Maybe, like the Baseball Hall of Fame we need an Eras Committee to select two pre-BTBA award books for induction.
So, Iāve played a little hooky in my 2019 BTBA reading, but as the adult fiction/nonfiction buyer for Island Books, Iām only doing my job right? Also, publishers keep sending me galleys please donāt stop. So, hereās a few early 2019 books I highly recommend:

by Seong-Nan Ha,Ā translated from the Korean by Janet Hong
Similar in feel to Toddler Hunting, Haās scenes of domestic life contain unnerving and surreal elements. The fourth story, āThe Woman Next Doorā has haunted me for weeks. Due out in April from Open Letter.

by StƩphane Larue, translated from the French by Pablo Strauss
A novel of heavy metal, art school, gambling addiction, and yes dishwashing.Ģż The Dishwasher is also one of the reasons my post is super late. Coming from Biblioasis in August.

by Maria Gainza, translated from the Spanish by Thomas Bunstead
A novel about a young art obsessed Argentinian woman, Rothko, her horrible surfer boyfriend, and his friends she describes as āwolves of the water,ā Optic Nerve is a welcome blend of life and art, and I hope Gainza writes more fiction. Available in April from Catapult.
Our 2019 BTBA longlist will be posted in about six weeks if anyone is interested in what Iāve been reading Iām on Twitter .

Hi, I’m with LLP (lindaleith.com) a Montreal literary publisher. We translate En to Fr and back again, the only publisher in Canada that does this. I’d like to point you to our catalogue or send you a book or two. Get in touch š
Leila Marshy
info@lindaleith.com
(can’t find any other way to contact you other than leaving this comment!)