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RESULTSSearching enCompass books for 'Timothy Mo'... We found 7 matches.
Timothy Mo
Brownout on Breadfruit Boulevard The story follows the career of Mrs Victoria Init, wife of a powerful southern Philippines politician, a thinking woman's Imelda Marcos.
1979 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize1982 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Sour Sweet1982 Hawthornden Prize1986 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) An Insular Possession1991 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) The Redundancy of Courage1992 E.M. Forster Award (American Academy of Arts and Letters) 1999 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for Fiction)
Paddleless Press 1995 pbk £5.99 ISBN 0-9524193-1-9
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth74
http://www.surfaceimpression.com/timothymo/monkeysour.html
Timothy Mo
An Insular Possession This novel documents the first Anglo-Chinese Opium Warthrough the eyes of two young Americans on the China Coast in the 1830s.
1979 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize1982 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Sour Sweet1982 Hawthornden Prize1986 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) An Insular Possession1991 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) The Redundancy of Courage1992 E.M. Forster Award (American Academy of Arts and Letters) 1999 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for Fiction)
Paddleless Press 2002 pbk £8.99 ISBN -0-9524193-8-6
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth74
http://www.surfaceimpression.com/timothymo/insulared.html
Timothy Mo
The Monkey King The Poons, according to Hong Kong gossip, have plenty of money. But when Wallace Nolasco marries May Ling, daughter of the house of Poon, he finds he has been sold short. Wallace is relegated to the bottom of the household pecking order.
Paddleless Press 2000 pbk £6.99 ISBN -0-9524193-7-8
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth74
Timothy Mo
The Redundancy of Courage An Indonesian island is hastily given independence, and a Chinese-educated homosexual who was born on the island returns from his Canadian university to find his life radically altered. The story, shortlisted for the 1991 Booker Prize, represents an account of a post-colonial disaster.
1979 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize; 1982 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist)
Vintage 1992 pbk £6.99 ISBN 0-09-989060-7
Timothy Mo
Renegade or Halo 2 This novel narrated by Rey Castro, a black Amerasian who, born in destitution, is cared for by an eccentric Jesuit until fate forces him to be made the scapegoat of a crime and he is forced into semi-slavery overseas.
1979 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize1982 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Sour Sweet1982 Hawthornden Prize1986 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) An Insular Possession1991 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) The Redundancy of Courage1992 E.M. Forster Award (American Academy of Arts and Letters) 1999 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for Fiction)
Paddleless Press 2000 pbk £7.99 ISBN -0-9524193-3-5
Timothy Mo
Sour Sweet From the author of THE MONKEY KING, a novel about the immigrant experience in general and about expatriate Chinese in particular.
1979 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize1982 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Sour Sweet1982 Hawthornden Prize1986 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) An Insular Possession1991 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) The Redundancy of Courage1992 E.M. Forster Award (American Academy of Arts and Letters) 1999 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for Fiction)
Paddleless Press 1999 pbk £6.99 ISBN -0-9524193-2-7
Timothy Mowl
William Kent William Kent (1685-1748) was great without a hint of gravitas, a con man who became one of the artistic geniuses of his age. He was a high camp Yorkshire bachelor, brought back by Lord Burlington from an artistic apprenticeship in Rome where he had painted for a cardinal and won prizes from a pope. In London, he charmed the surly old Hanoverian King George I, redecorated Kensington Palace for him with a clumsy bravura, and survived the subsequent critical storm - just. England was in stylistic chaos after rejecting its lawful Stuart rulers and Burlington was imposing a chaste and dreary Palladianism on a philistine island people. Kent saw his chance and never looked back. Queen Caroline, the real ruler, used him to project in sensational garden buildings by the Thames at Richmond her vision of a new scientific Britain. Sir Robert Walpole paid him to turn Houghton Hall in Norfolk into an imperial palace outshining anything the German monarchs could raise. Another prime minister, the virtuous Henry Pelham, built with Kent a revolutionary suburban bolt-hole in Surrey. Between them they invented the Gothic Revival out at Esher, but have never been given the credit.Late in life, while raising an alabaster temple to Jupiter at Holkham Hall, also in Norfolk, and the sexiest interiors in London on Berkeley Square, Kent was discovering his true genius, laying out casually at Esher, Stowe in Buckinghamshire and Rousham near Oxford, the Arcadian image of the 'English Garden' that would take the continent, even France, by storm as England's only original contribution to European culture.
Jonathan Cape 2006 hbk £25.00 ISBN 0-224-07350-8
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