College basketball fans may have to wait until Tuesday for their yearly N.C.A.A. tournament fix, but March Madness for lit geeks is already well under way thanks to The Morning Newsâs Tournament of Books.
The online contest, first held in 2005, pits 16 novels published the previous year against one another in a series of critical cage matches decided by a panel of judges, with match analysis provided by the novelists Kevin Guilfoile and John Warner.
So far in this yearâs opening round, Gillian Flynnâs monster best seller, âGone Girl,â has stomped Miles Kleeâs small-press underdog, âIvylandâ; Adam Johnsonâs North Korean nightmare, âThe Orphan Masterâs Son,â has slipped past Maria Sempleâs Seattle satire, âWhereâd You Go, Bernadette,â and Hilary Mantelâs Tudor-themed historical novel âBring Up the Bodiesâ has beaten out Laurent Binetâs Nazi-themed historical novel, âHHhH,â among other bloody (and wordy) encounters. Next up, on Monday: Lauren Groffâs âArcadiaâ versus Sheila Hetiâs âHow Should a Person Beâ
Ms. Mantel, with two Man Booker Prizes under her belt (not to mention a split-decision in her recent dustup with the former Kate Middleton), would seem to be a heavy favorite to reach this yearâs final, to be held on March 29. (The parting message from a judge in the contest, Jack Hitt, to M! s. Mantel, whom he compares to Mae West: âMarry me.â) But the tournament has a history of upsets, thanks to a Zombie Round, which (sadly) does not feature actual novels about zombies but rather two books chosen from among the eliminated, which are given a shot at bumping off the survivors before the championship match.
Last year Patrick DeWittâs novel âThe Sisters Brothersâ rose from the dead to smite Teju Coleâs âOpen City,â the very book that had knocked it out in the semifinals. âOne Shining Moment,â anyone