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Lee Langley

Auteur de Une ombre japonaise

12+ oeuvres 187 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Lee Langley, the author of nine novels, has also written for the stage and screen and has won the Writers' Guild Best Fiction Award and a Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best Novel for Persistent Rumours (Milkweed, 1994). Her novels have been shortlisted twice for the Hawthornden Prize in Britain. afficher plus Langley's stage writing has been produced in London's West End, and her scriptwriting work for British and American television includes a dramatization of Graham Greene's The Tenth Man, with Anthony Hopkins and Derek Jacobi. She writes on travel and the arts for leading newspapers and journals. Born in Calcutta, India, of Scottish parents, Langley now lives in England, where she is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and active in PEN, the international writers' organization afficher moins

Œuvres de Lee Langley

Une ombre japonaise (2010) 53 exemplaires
Distant Music (2001) 37 exemplaires
Persistent Rumours (1992) 25 exemplaires
From the Broken Tree (1978) 19 exemplaires
Changes of Address (1987) 12 exemplaires
A House in Pondicherry (1995) 10 exemplaires
False Pretences (1998) 8 exemplaires
Dead Center (1968) 4 exemplaires
Paradijs met ketchup (1983) 3 exemplaires
Only Person (1974) 1 exemplaire
Sunday girl (1973) 1 exemplaire

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A strange tale set in the Andaman Islands of India during the lifetime of a man who was born there during the days of British colonisation and the damaged view he had of the world, his relations and his own place in it.
½
 
Signalé
ElizabethCromb | Jan 22, 2023 |
This book takes the story of the opera Madam Butterfly as a starting point and tells a story from there using the same main characters. It is set in an interesting time period in history - the years leading up to the second world war. Joey the young child of Lieutenant Pinkerton and the Japanese girl Cho Cho is taken to live in America by PInkerton and his fiancee and brought up there. He does not look Japanese at all with his blond hair but when the second World War comes someone tells and he is sent along with the other Japanese to an internment camp where for the first time he is surrounded by other Japanese speaking, a language he does not know or understandl. Imagine it. To the American people who do not know him he looks like one of them and has been brought up as one of them. The Japanese themselves are at first suspicious of him for he looks different and knows nothing of their language and culture. But the internment cmap proves to be a learning experience for him where he makes up for what he does not know. (Spoiler ahead) In a twist different from the opera Joey learns that he was lied to, that his mother did not in fact succeed in killing herself and is still alive and good friends with Suzuki who is amrried to his mother's brother. Joey is eventually able to leave the internment camp if he goes to fight in a Japanese unit, in Europe. When the war is over you know that he will want to go to Japan to try and track down his mother and get to know and understand the place where he was born, that he cannot remember. He is able to track Suzuki down and learn more of his mothers's life from her but is unfortunately too late to meet his mother who was killed when the bomb was dropped on Nagaski. This was a good story and a very enjoyable read. I could certainly feel something of what Joey must have felt growing up torn between the two cultures, and how hard it must have been for him being lied to by the only mother he knew, when she kept from him the fact that his own mother was still alve.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
kiwifortyniner | Feb 25, 2011 |
What a great find! I studied Portuguese at uni, and have been interested in their culture for a long time. Emmanuel and Esperanca are two spirits who are destined to be together, though life and history gets in the way. PLEASE don't be misled into thinking this is some trashy romance, it isn't. Emmanuel, in his many forms, is Jewish and Esperanca is Portuguese. Their story unfolds with a backdrop of Portuguese history: voyages of discovery, earthquake in Lisbon, exile from Salazar's regime, ...
½
 
Signalé
soffitta1 | Dec 9, 2008 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
12
Aussi par
1
Membres
187
Popularité
#116,277
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
3
ISBN
42
Langues
2

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