Tan Twan Eng został laureatem 2012 Man Asian Literary Prize!
TanTwan Eng was announced tonight as the winner of the 2012 Man Asian Literary Prize, becoming the first Malaysian author to win Asia’s most prestigious literary prize.
The author won with his novel The Garden of Evening Mists, which is only the second time the Man Asian Literary Prize has been won by a novel originally written in English. All previous winners, except Ilustrado by Miguel Syjuco (2008), won as English translations.
The novel, set during the aftermath of the Japanese occupation of Malaya, won the USD 30,000 award, from a shortlist of five books spanning the whole Asian continent.
Professor David Parker, Executive Director of the Asian Literary Prize, the organising body of the award, said, “Achieved with the seemingly effortless poise of a remarkable fictional artistry, Tan Twan Eng’s winning novel will be prized by all those who cannot resist the mastery of language.”
Ben Kane to autor bestsellerowych powieści historycznych, których akcja rozgrywa się w czasach starożytnych, cieszących się również dużym uznaniem wśród krytyków i znawców tego gatunku.
Jego debiutująca trylogia rzymska sprzedała się w ponad 450 tys. egz. W Polsce nie był dotychczas wydany. Brytyjski Random House podpisuje z Kane'em prawa na kolejne książki z dużym wyprzedzeniem, aby na pewno mieć tego coraz bardziej znanego autora w swoich szeregach. Zapraszamy do zamawiania materiałów recenzenckich (dostępne maszynopisy oraz egzemplarze) u agenta.
kontakt: Renata Paczewska, renata@literatura.com.pl
Najnowszy tytuł Kane'a - HANNIBAL - FIELDS OF BLOOD, będzie miał swoją brytyjską premierę w lipcu 2013 roku.
HANNIBAL - FIELDS OF BLOOD - synopsis
Hannibal's campaign to defeat Rome continues as he marches south to confront his enemy.
With him is a young soldier, Hanno. Like his general, Hanno burns to vanquish Rome. Never has the possibility seemed so likely.
But a stealthy game of cat and mouse is being played as Rome's generals seek to avoid confrontation.
Eventually the two armies meet under a fierce summer sun. The place is Cannae - the fields of blood.
The battle will go down in history as one of the bloodiest ever fought, a battle in which Hanno knows he must fight as never before - just to stay alive.
Some info on the basis for the books:
(from the author's official website www.benkane.net)
It’s always interesting to find out where writers get their ideas from. Some find it when they’re researching a time period, or watching a TV programme. Others find their muse when they’re driving, or listening to music, or just walking their dogs. I’m not sure that I have a set method for doing it. The seeds of The Forgotten Legion trilogy come partly from a trip I took in 1998, along part of the ancient Silk Road that stretches from the Mediterranean coast of Syria & Lebanon all the way to China. I had spontaneously decided on the trip after reading The Lost Heart of Asia, an amazing travelogue by the acclaimed writer Colin Thubron. Armed with 9 months worth of once a week night-class Russian, over $3,000 in cash (there were no ATMs where I was going; traveller’s cheques weren’t accepted either) and a dollop of intrepidation, I flew to Tehran in May 1998. After ten days in Iran, I was in love with the country. Even now, having visited more than 65 countries, I can honestly say that the Iranians were the most friendly people I have ever met (they’re joint first with the Pakistanis). I visited some of the most incredible places, such as the palaces and huge courtyard in Esfahan, the teeming Tehran markets and best of all, Persepolis, former capital of the Persian empire until Alexander the Great sacked it in the 32os BC. There, amid the huge columns that were still lying where they had fallen more than two millennia before, I was the only tourist. What better way to give a sense of atmosphere?!
But it was in Turmenistan, former Soviet Socialist Republic and newly independent state, that I stumbled upon the place that would feature in The Forgotten Legion trilogy nearly a decade later. In the Turkmen desert lie the ruins of a city called Merv, which was sacked by the Mongols in the 1220s AD. At the time, it was home to more than a million people; it was a metropolis that dwarfed every other city not just in Europe, but the world. When the Mongols took it, they killed every man, woman and child they could find. Then they rode away for 3 days, and came back, slaughtering all those who had come out of hiding. It was the largest number of people killed in one place until the atrocities committed in the 20th century.
That horrifying statistic hammering into my brain like the burning sun, I wandered around the site in temperatures exceeding 45 C. I suffered sunstroke for the only time in my life, which is possibly why I didn’t really believe the line in my guidebook which said that the city had previously been known as Antiochia, and had been founded by Alexander the Great. Furthermore, the city had seen the arrival in 53 BC of thousands of Roman soldiers. So far from the Mediterranean, so far from Syria and Judaea? I thought. No way.
Yet when I did a little research upon my return, I discovered this to be true: that after the battle of Carrhae, in which Marcus Licinius Crassus had lost his life, 10,000 legionaries were marched east to Margiana (Turkmenistan) by the Parthians, there to serve as border guards. Of course I forgot all about this gem of an idea for many years. It was only when I had been signed by a literary agent in 2006, and had been told in no uncertain terms that my first novel, set in 2nd C. AD Britain (on Hadrian’s Wall, no less – at the same time as Wounds of Honour by Anthony Riches!), did not quite make the grade, that I revisited the story of the forgotten legions. I am very glad that I did, because the rest, as they say, is history!
Zapraszamy do zamawiania materiałów recenznenckich nowego kryminału noir Ian Tregillis!
Something More Than Night is a Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler-inspired murder mystery set in Thomas Aquinas’s vision of Heaven. It’s a noir detective story starring fallen angels,the heavenly choir, nightclub stigmatics, a priest with a dirty secret, a femme fatale, and the Voice of God.
Somebody has murdered the angel Gabriel. Worse, the Jericho Trumpet has gone missing, putting Heaven on the brink of a truly cosmic crisis. But the twisty plot that unfolds from the murder investigation leads to something much bigger: a con job one billion years in the making.
Because this is no mere murder. A small band of angels has decided to break out of heaven, but they need a human patsy to make their plan work.
Much of the story is told from the point of view of Bayliss, a cynical fallen angel who has modeled himself on Philip Marlowe. The yarn he spins follows the progression of a Marlowe novel — the mysterious dame who needs his help, getting grilled by the bulls, finding a stiff, getting slipped a mickey
Angels and gunsels, dames with eyes like fire, and a grand maguffin, Something More Than Night is a murder mystery for the cosmos.
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Osoby zainteresowane materiałami do recenzji proszone są o kontakt z Patrycją Świat pod adresem patrycja@literatura.com.pl
Doskonale napisany, pełen napięcia literacki debiut Carpenter to historia osamotnionej matki i jej syna - członka amerykańskiej jednostki do zadań specjalnych. Opowieść o m.in. o tym jak wojna wpływa na życie rodzinne.
ELEVEN DAYS will be published by Hodder (Two Roads) in the UK and Knopf in the US in June 2013.
ELEVEN DAYS begins in May 2011. Sara’s son Jason has been missing for nine days in the aftermath of a special operations forces mission. Out of devotion to him, Sara–smart, modest, tough-minded–has made herself knowledgeable about things military, and, as a freelance editor, she frequently works for Washington policy makers and wonks. But she knows nothing more about her son’s disappearance than the press corps camped out in her driveway. In a series of flashbacks we learn about Jason’s absentee father: a man who claimed to have been a writer but who died, according to “insiders,” helping to make the country safer. Through letters Jason wrote his mother while training, we see him becoming a strong, compassionate leader. But his fate will be determined by events that fall outside the sphere of his training, and far outside the strong embrace of his mother’s love.
The novel weaves together years of Jason’s training in special operations forces with agonising days in the life of Sara as she waits for news of him. The book considers a classic question : why do nations send sons to wars and how can mothers bear it? As well as a touching picture of the bond between a mother and a son this is a unique look into the training, history and culture of one of the world’s elite forces. Page-turning and haunting, this is an astonishing debut which questions the very nature of sacrifice and love…
What Denis Johnson did for the Vietnam War in Tree of Smoke, Lea Carpenter does for Iraq and Afghanistan in her superb Eleven Days. She drills deeply into the culture and lore of special operations warfare, and just as deeply into the minds of the people--the military-intellectual complex, if you will--who ultimately determine the American way of making war. But at the core of this extraordinary novel is the love of a mother for her child. That's the story of us all, and that's the story that may well break your heart. – Ben Fountain, Author & National Book Award Finalist
Lea Carpenter’s ELEVEN DAYS is an extraordinary accomplishment. Written with an elegant precision, this book is at its core a story about love: between a mother and a son, a son and a father, and a special group of men for each other and the imperfect country they choose to serve. I highly recommend it. — Kevin Powers, author of ‘The Yellow Birds’
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W sprawie materiałów recenzenckich należy kontaktować się z Agatą Żabowską pod adresem agata@literatura.com.pl
Ruszyła sprzedaż praw do najnowszej książki dla młodzieży autorstwa Matta de la Peñi pt. THE LIVING. Maszynopis i materiały recenzenckie dostępne u agenta.
Shy takes the summer job to make some money. A few months on a luxury cruise liner – how bad can it be? Bikinis, free food, maybe even a girl or two . . . there’s always going to be a fresh crop of passengers, after all.
He’ll rake in the tips and be able to help his mom out with the bills. But then an earthquake more massive than any ever recorded hits California, and Shy’s life is changed forever. The earthquake is only the beginning. Twenty-four hours and a catastrophic chain of events later; Shy is lost at sea, fighting to survive – and stuck with her. She’s blond and she’s rich, and never in her life would she have dreamed she’d be adrift in the Pacific Ocean, surrounded by death and completely dependent on a guy like Shy. And Shy hasn’t faced the worst yet.
THE LIVING is a genre-bending adventure novel that sets the exploration of race, identity, and class against fight-for-your-life survival. It is author Matt de la Peña as you’ve never seen him – and at his unputdownable best.
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Ososby zainteresowane materiałami recenzenckimi (maszynopis dostępny) proszone są o kontakt z Agatą Żabowską pod adresem agata@literatura.com.pl