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         Mantel Hilary:     more books (56)
  1. La Sombra de La Guillotina (Spanish Edition) by Hilary Mantel, 1998-06
  2. Bookforum June/July/Aug/Sept 2006 (Volume 13, issue 2) THE FIRST NOVEL, The Poetry of Guantanomo Bay's Detainees, Greil Marcus on Philip Roth, Gary Indiana on Curzio Malaparte, Toni Bentley on Story of O, Justin Spring on Julia Child, Fantagraphics Thirteenth Anniversary by Francine Prose, Rebecca Goldstien, Patricia McGrath, Jim Crace, Francisco Goldman, Lynne Tillman, John Banville, Jonathan Lethem, Maureen Howard, Craig Seligman William H. Gassm Hilary Mantel, 2006-01-01
  3. Der riesige O'Brien. by Hilary Mantel, 2003-07-01
  4. London Magazine: New Series. April/May 1987. Evolume 27 / Numbers 1 & 2 by Alan (Ed.); Lee Kercheval, Jesse; Worrall, Simon; Mantel, Hilary; Etc. Ross, 1987
  5. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel, 2010-11-01
  6. Books by Hilary Mantel (Study Guide): Wolf Hall, a Change of Climate, Every Day Is Mother's Day, Beyond Black, Vacant Possession, Fludd
  7. Biography - Mantel, Hilary Mary (1952-): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2007-01-01
  8. People From Glossop: Vivienne Westwood, Hilary Mantel, Nicholas Garlick, Sir Samuel Hill-Wood, 1st Baronet, the Bodines, Keith Briggs
  9. Wolf Hall [Audiobook][Unabridged] (Audio CD) by -Hilary Mantel-, 2009
  10. A Change of Climate by Hilary Mantel, 1994
  11. The Tortoise and the Hare by Elizabeth Jenkins, 2009-02-01
  12. Fludd by Hilary Mantel, 2000-01-01
  13. C'est tous les jours la fête des mères by Hilary Mantel, Anne Damour, 2002-04-30
  14. Fludd by Hilary Mantel, 1990-01-01

21. Washington University - News & Information
edu British novelist hilary mantel reads for Writing Program Reading SeriesSept. 26 St. Louis, MO., 909-02. hilary mantel. Critically
http://news-info.wustl.edu/News/2002/mantel.html

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British novelist Hilary Mantel reads for Writing Program Reading Series Sept. 26
[St. Louis, MO., 9-09-02] Hilary Mantel Critically acclaimed British novelist Hilary Mantel will read from her work at 8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 26, for The Writing Program Reading Series at Washington University in St. Louis. In addition, Mantel will give a colloquium on the craft of fiction at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 2. Both events are free and open to the public and will take place in Hurst Lounge, located in Room 201, Duncker Hall, in the northwest corner of Brookings Quadrangle. A book signing will follow the reading and copies of Mantel's works will be available for purchase. For more information, call (314) 935-7130. "Hilary Mantel might still be something of a well-kept secret here," said Marshall Klimasewiski, assistant professor of English, "but back in Britain she has been recognized since the early '90s as one of the most ambitious novelists around. Her historical fictions The Giant, O'Brien

22. Lit For Fun On BookBay.com
by JM Coetzee No Great Mischief by Alistair MacLeod Daughter of Fortune by IsabelAllende Eight Months on Ghazzah Street by hilary mantel Painted Desert by
http://www.whidbey.com/bookbay/BookClub_LitforFun.htm
BookSearch
(Title, Author, Keywords)
Lit for Fun BookClub 2003 Selections
The Sky Fisherman by Craig Lesley
Five Quarters of the Orange
by Joanne Harris ... by Graham Greene 2002 Selections
The Golden Child by Penelope Fitzgerald
Flush
by Virginia Woolfe ... by Ann Patchett
River Town by Thomas Keneally
Wild Life
by Molly Gloss
Servants of the Map
by Andrea Barrett ... by Joanne Harris 2001 Selections
Frankenstein
by Mary Shelley Kaaterskill Falls by Alegra Goodman ... by Margaret Atwood 2000 Selections Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver The Archivist by Martha Cooley ... by Anne Fadiman 1999 Selections Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier Martin Dressler by Steven Millhauser ... by Michael Palin 1998 Selections Nothing To Do But Stay by Carrie Young Divine Secrets of Ya-Ya Sisterhood
by Rebecca Wells ... by Lorna Lundvik 1997 Selections A Cure For Dreams by Kaye Gibbons Blood Tie by Mary Settle ... by Graham Swift 1996 Selections Choices by Mary Lee Settle No Ordinary Time by Doris Kearns Goodwin ... by Kaye Gibbons The BookBay Shop@BookBay.com

23. Publishers Weekly | Reed Business Information
In the late 1970s, hilary mantel traveled to Botswana with her husband,a geologist employed by the government geological survey.
http://publishersweekly.reviewsnews.com/esec/Article_166099.htm
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Hilary Mantel: The Novelist in Action
In the late 1970s, Hilary Mantel traveled to Botswana with her husband, a geologist employed by the government geological survey. On a card table on a verandah covered with bougainvillea, using a portable typewriter frequently choked with dust from the Kalahari desert, she turned out two drafts of a first novel, a 350,000-word account of the French Revolution. San Francisco Chronicle (Forecasts, July 13), as a hardcover original.

24. The Shamrock Isle Irish Bookshelf
The Giant, O'Brien Book By hilary mantel nbspAbout the Author hilary mantel isthe author of seven previous novels, including Eight Months on Ghazzah Street
http://www.shamrockisle.com/irish9.html
Irish Books
First
Previous Next Last ...
The Godmother's Apprentice
Book By Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
The Magic Arts in Celtic Britain
Book By Lewis Spence
Celtic Book of Days
Book By Sarah Costley, Charles Kightly
Dubliners (Dover Thrift Editions) [UNABRIDGED]
Book By James Joyce
About the Author: The Modern Library has played a significant role in American cultural life for the better part of a century. The series was founded in 1917 by the publishers Boni and Liveright and eight years later acquired by Bennett Cerf and Donald Klopfer. It provided the foundation for their next publishing venture, Random House. The Modern Library has been a staple of the American book trade, providing readers with affordable hardbound editions of important works of literature and thought. For the Modern Library's seventy-fifth anniversary, Random House redesigned the series, restoring as its emblem the running torch-bearer created by Lucian Bernhard in 1925 and refurbishing jackets, bindings, and type, as well as inaugurating a new program of selecting titles. The Modern Library continues to provide the world's best books, at the best prices. This text refers to the hardcover edition of this title
Four Letters of Love
Book By Niall Williams
The Mammy
Book By Brendan O'Carroll(Introduction)
Pagan Celtic Ireland: The Enigma of the Irish Iron Age
Book By Barry Raftery
Biting at the Grave : The Irish Hunger Strikes and the Politics of Despair
Book By Padraig O'Malley The Giant, O'Brien

25. Springfield Library: Fiction About People With Disabilities
Major, Devorah An Open Weave (m) FICT M29015 61. mantel, hilary EveryDay is Mother's Day (m) FICT mantel, hilary Every day. Mayerson
http://www.springfieldlibrary.org/reading/disabled.html
Fiction about People with Disabilities
Despite This Flesh: The Disabled in Stories and Poems
With Wings: An Anthology of Literature By and About Women With Disabilities
Alexander, Bruce
Blind Justice (p)
MYST A37435 Anderson, Catherine
Annie's Song (p)
PBK ROMANCE A Bender, Karen
Like Normal People (m)
FICT BENDER, KAREN E Like nor Brown, Rosellen
Tender Mercies (p)
FICT B8195 80 Cusk, Rachel The Country Life (p) FICT CUSK, RACHEL Country Deaver, Jeff A Maiden's Grave (p) FICT DEAVER, JEFF Maiden’s Groom, Winston Forrest Gump: A Novel (m) FICT G9127 23 .2 Hecht, Daniel Skull Session (m) FICT HECHT, DANIEL Skull Hugo, Victor The Hunchback of Notre Dame (p) FICT H879 14 Keyes, Daniel Flowers for Algernon (m) FICT K521 23 Land, Jon Hope Mountain (p) FICT LAND, JON Hope mou Lott, Brett Jewel: A Novel (m) FICT L9165 37 Major, Devorah An Open Weave (m) FICT M29015 61 Mantel, Hilary Every Day is Mother's Day (m) FICT MANTEL, HILARY Every day Mayerson, Evelyn Wilde Sanjo (m) FICT M461 75 Plain, Belva

26. PRICEFARMER.COM: Farm-Fresh Price Comparisons Of Books
hilary mantel. 17 Titles Sorted by Title Alphabetically. 1. A Changeof Climate (Paperback) by hilary mantel July 1997
http://www.pricefarmer.com/cgi-bin/farm?author=Mantel, Hilary

27. Books: Bleak Houses (The Boston Phoenix . 08-14-00)
In her 1989 novel Fludd , hilary mantel builds an unlikely sympathy with theoften selflimiting characters. hilary mantel's not-so-blithe spirits
http://weeklywire.com/ww/08-14-00/boston_books_1.html
Bleak Houses
Hilary Mantel's not-so-blithe spirits By Clea Simon Fludd by Hilary Mantel (Owl Books), 181 pages (paperback), $13. Fludd is not a pretty-looking name, and neither is the gentleman who bears it a likely hero. A supposed curate, and possible supernatural force, the quiet stranger who comes to town in the book that shares his moniker is, however, an agent of change. And as any reader of Hilary Mantel's fiction can guess from the onset, the transformations he brings about come with a spirit that belies appallingly grim conditions. In this short 1989 novel, one of the British author's eight that had not previously been published in this country, Fludd and his co-adventurers inhabit the fictional but realistically depressed village of Fetherhoughton in the industrial north of England in the year 1956. It's a tightly clamped world of dampened weather and precious little light, into which Fludd appears on a "particularly wet evening." And though our hero may be an alchemist he is named for the 17th-century physician, scholar, and alchemist Robert Fludd he does not perform his chemical magic with any great flashes of brilliance or conjure any sparks or sun. The Fetherhoughton that Fludd comes to, and ultimately transforms, is a sooty, dank place of perpetual twilight, bordered by moors and dying factories, hatred and frost. Which does not mean that our chemist/curate Fludd, or this book, is without humor. Here as in her other historical novels notably the superlative

28. Books & Film Biographies M-O
MacLiammóir, Micheál Malamud, Bernard Mallarmé, Stéphane Malouf, David Mamet,David Mann, Heinrich Mansfield, Katherine mantel, hilary Marai, Sandor Marlowe
http://www.artsworld.com/books-film/biographies/m-o/
Biographies
A-C
D-F G-I J-L ...
Ozeki, Ruth L

29. Mantel, Hilary
Biography hilary mantel Writer England Born 6 Jul 1952 hilary mantelwas born in northern Derbyshire. She was educated at a convent
http://www.artsworld.com/books-film/biographies/m-o/hilary-mantel.html
categories='cat1=literature'; Biography
Hilary Mantel
Writer England Born 6 Jul 1952
Hilary Mantel was born in northern Derbyshire. She was educated at a convent school in Cheshire and went on to the London School of Economics and Sheffield University, where she studied law. After university she was briefly a social worker in a geriatric hospital, and much later used her experiences in her novels 'Every Day is Mother's Day' and 'Vacant Possession'. In 1977 she went to live in Botswana with her husband, then a geologist. In 1982 they moved on to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, where she would set her third novel, 'Eight Months on Ghazzah Street'.
Her first novel was published in 1985, and she returned to the UK the following year. In 1987 she was awarded the Shiva Naipaul Memorial Prize for travel writing, and became the film critic of The Spectator. Her fourth novel, 'Fludd', was awarded the Cheltenham Festival Prize, the Southern Arts Literature Prize, and the Winifred Holtby Prize. Her fifth novel, 'A Place of Greater Safety', won the Sunday Express 'Book of the Year Award.'
A Change of Climate, published in 1993, is a story of and East Anglian family, former missionaries, torn apart by conflicts generated in Southern Africa in the early years of apartheid. 'An Experiment in Love' published in 1995, is a story about childhood and university life, set in London in 1970. It was awarded the Hawthornden Prize.

30. CVCO - Overbooked: Notable Fiction 1997
Mann, Thomas, Six Early Stories, Aug, NYTBR Notable. mantel, hilary,A Change of Climate (trade paperback reprint), July, NYTBR Notable.
http://www.overbooked.org/hotfic97.html
Overbooked (Book Links): http://www.overbooked.org/
FAQ
Booktalk Forum Genre Fiction ... What's New?
Hot Fiction 1997
Modified: March 6, 2003 5:28 PM
Notable Fiction 1997
Some of the major hardcover (and a few paperback) titles released in the U.S. All information is subject to change and dyslexic typos. Alphabetically arranged by author. Notations have been added for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize Winners/Finalists, the National Book Critics Circle Award, NYTBR Notable Books of the Year 1997, NYTBR Editor's Choice selections, The Notable Books Council of the American Library Association Reference and Adult User Services Association (ALA RUSA)selections, the Black Caucus of the American Library Association's (BCALA) Literary Awards, The American Library Association's Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Task Force Book Award Committee, Booklist's Editors' Choices, and Library Journal Best Books 1997. Notations have also been added for the National Book Award Finalists/Winner, the Booker Prize Winner, the titles listed by Publishers Weekly as the Best Books of '97, and the Washington Post Book World Informed Opinion Selections.
AUTHOR TITLE DATE Stars /NOTES Abbott, Lee

31. CVCO - Overbooked: Hot Fiction 2000
mantel, hilary, Fludd (trade paper), June, NYT Notable. mantel, hilary, Vacant Possession(trade paper), March, star. Marillier, Juliet, Daughter of the Forest, May, star.
http://www.overbooked.org/hotfic2000.html
Overbooked (Book Links): http://www.overbooked.org/
FAQ
Booktalk Forum Genre Fiction ... What's New?
Hot Fiction 2000
Modified: March 6, 2003 5:28 PM
Notable Fiction
Some of the major hardcover titles scheduled for release in the U.S. All information is subject to change and dyslexic typos. Alphabetically arranged by author. Starting in March, the date in the notes column indicates the last update for that entry. A star indicates the book received at least one starred review (indicating that review source felt the title was exceptional) from the following sources: Booklist (BL), Publisher's Weekly (PW), Kirkus, and Library Journal (LJ) Library Journal's Best Books, the ALA Notable Book Council's selections, and Booklist's Editor's Choice selections are noted. NYTBR Notable and Editor's Choices are included. NBCC (National Book Critics Circle) award nominees and other award nominees are mentioned when possible. AUTHOR TITLE DATE NOTES
Stars of 2000

Links to Stars information - large files!

32. Politics & Prose Bookstore And Coffeehouse
Here is what hilary mantel said, It takes a sophisticated and skilled narrationto give a jaded reader her childhood back; …being 50 I was allowed to stay
http://www.politics-prose.com/staff_reco.html
Search On Author, Title, Subject or ISBN Search the Site: Home Who are we? Fiction Bestsellers Nonfiction Bestsellers Events Calendar Staff Recommendations Kids Page! Membership Bookgroup Services Remainders/Sale Books Ordering Shopping Cart Coffeehouse Corporate Services Book-Each-Month Club Gift Registry Guest Book Directions to the Store Staff Recommendations
PAPERBACK FLYING STARTS

By Carla Cohen All of these books will be 20% off for members until the end of February. First I read Fingersmith by Sarah Waters (Riverhead, $15) because several of the writers recommended the Booker nominee. Here is what Hilary Mantel said, "It takes a sophisticated and skilled narration to give a jaded reader her childhood back; …being 50 I was allowed to stay up reading till dawn." Well, I didn't stay up till dawn, but I read the longish novel in two days-off, deliciously, enjoying the twists and turns, savoring the homage to Dickens and Wilkie Collins, enjoying the female protagonists outwitting the wicked villains. Then I read Crow Lake by Mary Lawson, (Dell, $12.95). Penelope Lively said that this is "a remarkable, tense narrative of family tragedy in northern Ontario, (Lawson is) a name to watch." Like the excellent

33. Writing And Surviving In England
But it is left to hilary mantel to make the case for excess “In theideal world, all published writers would be as rich as Croesus.
http://members.tripod.com/~warlight/GLAISTER.html
Writing and Surviving in England Dan Glaister ‘The classic urban pet scrounger puts together his wages from reviewing, creative writing, teaching, judging, readings, poems, grants, minicab driving and shoplifting’ Hugo Williams, poet. The image of the penniless writer struggling in a garret is a powerful and seductive one. But is it true? And is poverty a necessary spur to creativity? Fifty-two years ago Cyril Connolly attempted to answer these questions by asking his contemporaries. Now the exercise has been repeated, with a selection of today’s writers asked the same six questions. Their answers are revealed in The Cost of Letters , published on 1 May, 1998. The questions set by Connolly covered levels of income, the importance of subsidy, and ways of escaping the literary poverty trap. The nearest the two generations of writers come to a consensus is in answer to Connolly’s first question, “How much does a writer need to live on?” Nearly all agree that the answer should be, according to Julian Barnes, “The same as everyone else, that’s to say, anything from a monkish five thousand pounds p.a. to a well-healed professional’s one hundred thousand pounds”. But there are qualifications. In 1946 these included money for, as Dylan Thomas put it, “luxurious necessities”. “I want a lot, but whether I need what I want is another question,” he wrote. Today’s writers echo his artistry. “It depends on temperament, social expectation, drug use, number of children and so on,” writes Barnes. A L Kennedy points out the necessary, non-deductible expenses connected with the work, which might include “eye-catching frocks, designer jackets, cocaine and alcohol”. But it is left to Hilary Mantel to make the case for excess: “In the ideal world, all published writers would be as rich as Croesus. They could then indulge in dissipation and eccentricity on a scale the public has a right to expect”. Asked whether a “serious writer” could earn a living wage by writing, and if so, how, Connolly, and today’s questioners met a more varied response. “I am not sure I know any serious writers. I do not like to think how they earn their living,” writes Mantel.

34. PLCMC - Catalog - Large Print Books
Manning, Liza. The Glass Madonna. Mansell, Joanna. A Perfect Seduction. mantel,hilary, 1952, The Giant, O'Brien. Mapson, Jo-Ann. Hank Chloe. Mapson, Jo-Ann.
http://www.plcmc.org/catalog/largePrint.asp?alpha=M&typesort=author

35. Halton Hills Public Library Genre Book List
Kittredge, Mary, Desperate Remedy. Lescroart, John, The Oath. mantel, hilary, TheGiant O'Brien. Marr, John S. The Eleventh Plague. McCaffrey, Anne, Nerilka's Story.
http://www.library.hhpl.on.ca/RA_results.asp?GenreID=24

36. Guardian Unlimited Books | LRB Essay | Books LRB Archive
food production. 3 May 2001, Unhappy medium (I) hilary mantel delvesinto the pitiful story of spiritualist Helen Duncan. 3 May 2001,
http://books.guardian.co.uk/lrb/archive/0,7177,335258,00.html
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18 Mar 2003
Cleopatra: from history to myth

On the trail of the real Cleopatra
10 Mar 2003
Forget the little green men

James Hamilton-Paterson on the search for extraterrestrial life
20 Feb 2003
The rake's progress (part 2)

Continued 20 Feb 2003 The rake's progress James Wood on Pushkin and Eugene Onegin 6 Feb 2003 The disquieted American (part 2) Continued 6 Feb 2003 The disquieted American Chalmers Johnson on whistleblowing and Vietnam 20 Jan 2003 A funny-peculiar mind-body picture Steven Shapin on how Descartes kept body and soul together 7 Jan 2003 The pirate's head Barbara Everett on Measure for Measure 10 Dec 2002 Trading lives Megan Vaughan explores the daily life of a slave-trading ship 25 Nov 2002 The outsiders Frank Kermode dispels the myth of the Angry Young Men 6 Nov 2002 Double bind: the curious case of the corset Katha Pollitt examines the controversial history of the corset 28 Oct 2002 Sick as a parrot Adam Phillips on what the sad fate of the Spix's macaw tells us about extinction, conservation and ourselves

37. Guardian Unlimited Books | By Genre | Forget About The Plot, Find A Quiet Place
Whereas McEwan might be seen as a plunger, eager to start writing and finding hisrhythm once he has begun, the novelist hilary mantel approaches the water
http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/generalfiction/story/0,6000,116859,00.ht
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Interview: Caryl Phillips
Harry Potter goes to China Observer review: The Love Secrets of Don Juan by Tim Lott Observer review: The Brainfever Bird by Allan Sealy ... Review: Finding Helen by Colin Greenland
Forget about the plot, find a quiet place to think and buy an A4 notepad
Stephen Moss takes advice on writing great works of literature from the people who know
Thursday December 23, 1999
The Guardian

Style and structure are the essence of a book; great ideas are hogwash. - Vladimir Nabokov

38. Guardian Unlimited Observer | Review | Twenty Players Tipped: Britain's Best You
This year, the judges are Ian Jack, (editor of Granta and chair of the panel) RobertMcCrum (The Observer 's literary editor) hilary mantel (novelist and critic
http://www.observer.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,841374,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Soulmates Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer Home UK news International Politics ... Food
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Recent articles Saatchi's open house
Victoria Coren

Interview: Mick Hucknall, mother of all bachelors

We're all odd couples now
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Pop CD of the week: The Linkin feeling

The Guardian Front page Story index
Britain's best young novelists
Twenty players tipped Once every decade, 20 young British writers are named in a list that sets the literary agenda for a generation. Spring 2003 sees the next Top 20, and already the race is hotting up... Kate Kellaway Sunday November 17, 2002

39. Guardian Unlimited Observer | Review | Granta's Grotto
no Sophie Dahl?' complained Ian Jack, editor of Granta) were Jack himself, as chair;Robert McCrum, The Observer's literary editor; hilary mantel, novelist and
http://www.observer.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,868621,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Soulmates Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer Home UK news International Politics ... Food
Tools
Text-only version Send it to a friend Read it later See saved stories
The Observer Front page Story index
Recent articles Saatchi's open house
Victoria Coren

Interview: Mick Hucknall, mother of all bachelors

We're all odd couples now
...
Pop CD of the week: The Linkin feeling

The Guardian Front page Story index
Granta's grotto
Every decade Granta's list of Britain's best young novelists causes a literary sensation. Here The Observer presents an exclusive preview of the winners for 2003 Geraldine Bedell Sunday January 5, 2003

40. OUP: On Modern British Fiction: Leader
Essays by Martin Amis, Ian McEwan, hilary mantel, James Wood, Christopher Hitchens,Michael Wood, Elaine Showalter, and others range from modern historical
http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-924932-6
VIEW BASKET Quick Links About OUP Career Opportunities Contacts Need help? oup.com Search the Catalogue Site Index American National Biography Booksellers' Information Service Children's Fiction and Poetry Children's Reference Dictionaries Dictionary of National Biography Digital Reference English Language Teaching Higher Education Textbooks Humanities International Education Unit Journals Law Medicine Music Oxford English Dictionary Reference Rights and Permissions Science School Books Social Sciences World's Classics UK and Europe Book Catalogue Help with online ordering How to order Postage Returns policy ... Table of contents
On Modern British Fiction
Edited by Zachary Leader , Professor of English Literature at The University of Surrey, Roehampton
Publication date: 3 October 2002
328 pages, 216mm x 138mm
Ordering Individual customers
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Teachers in UK and European schools (and FE colleges in the UK):
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Description
  • ''an enlightening collection'' - Good Book Guide
  • ''lively and diverse collection'' - Daily Telegraph
  • 'Anyone at all interested in fiction (or indeed in what it is to be 'modern' or 'British') will find at least three or four of these essays worth the price of the book.' -

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