Make us your homepage



  Top100  


  Classifieds  


  News  


  Help  


  Contacts  

Search: 

 



News

News category


Naipaul biography among 6 books competing for British non-fiction prize

16.05.2008 15:04 Arts - Source: cbc.ca

A biography of writer V.S. Naipaul and a modern account of travel through Africa in the footsteps of H.M. Stanley have been nominated for Britain's richest non-fiction prize.

One U.S. writer and five from Britain were nominated for the 30,000 ($58,467 Cdn) Samuel Johnson prize in a shortlist released Thursday.

The World Is What It Is, an authorized, but sometimes unflattering, biography of Naipaul, one of the 20th century's most remarkable writers, is by British writer Patrick French.

Blood River: A Journey to Africa's Broken Heart, was written by Daily Telegraph correspondent Tim Butcher, who travelled on foot, via motorbike and dugout canoe on a journey through the Congo in 2000 that reproduced the voyage of African explorer Stanley.

Other nominees are:

  • Crow Country, by Mark Cocker, a naturalist's study of rooks and jackdaws, both members of the crow family.
  • The Whisperers by Orlando Figes, an account of the paranoia experienced by ordinary Russian families under Stalin.
  • The Rest is Noise, a musical history of the 20th century, by Alex Ross, music critic for the New Yorker.
  • The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher Or The Murder at Road Hill House, a true story of an 1860s murder and Scotland Yard detective Jack Whicher by Kate Summerscale.

The competition is open to non-fiction books written in English. Last year's winner was Imperial Life in the Emerald City by Rajiv Chandrasekaran.

The winner is to be announced July 15.

    Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: SMLXL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

    Related

    Internal Links

    Portrait of Baghdad's Green Zone takes U.K. non-fiction prize

    More Books Headlines

    Mad magazine pioneer Will Elder dies00William Elder, the illustrator who pioneered the visual style for iconic humour title Mad magazine, has died at the age of 86.December Man lauded at Canadian Authors Association awards00Montreal playwright Colleen Murphy's The December Man, a harrowing family story centred around the 1989 Montreal massacre of 14 women, has racked up another honour.Naipaul biography among 6 books competing for British non-fiction prize00A biography of writer V.S. Naipaul and a modern account of travel through Africa in the footsteps of H.M. Stanley have been nominated for Britain's richest non-fiction prize. My Messy Life explores slob subculture00Josh Freed, a Montreal journalist and admitted slob, doesn't deny his documentary about being messy is somewhat self-serving.Israel displays Dead Sea scroll for first time in decades00A Dead Sea scroll of the Book of Isaiah will go on public display in Jerusalem this week for the first time in more than 40 years.

    More Arts Headlines

    Comedian Russell Peters named Toronto's tourism envoy00Officials in Toronto are hoping humour will have tourists laughing and flocking to the city after naming comedian Russell Peters as the city's first new global ambassador for tourism. Mad magazine pioneer Will Elder dies00William Elder, the illustrator who pioneered the visual style for iconic humour title Mad magazine, has died at the age of 86.TV's Ellen plans wedding after gay marriage law passes00Ellen DeGeneres is putting the California Supreme Court ruling in favour of gay marriage into action — she and Portia de Rossi plan to wed, DeGeneres announced during a taping of her talk show.Quebec artist Claude Thberge dies at 7300Quebec artist Claude Thberge, whose oeuvre spanned painting, creating murals, sculpture and stained glass, has died at the age of 73.Canadian singer Shania Twain splitting from music-producer husband00Award-winning Canadian pop star Shania Twain is splitting from her music-producer husband Robert (Mutt) Lange, a representative for the singer revealed Thursday.  

    Arts Features

    Breaking sound barriersVictoriaville festival celebrates 25 years Disc of the weekDeath Cab for Cutie's Narrow StairsHot pursuitAn appreciation of the most memorable chase scenes in filmWhat lies beneathAfghan war rugs weave tales of the country’s recent past Designed to shockThe 10 most controversial videos of all timeMaximum overdriveThe live-action kids flick Speed Racer reaches a dangerous velocity

    People who read this also read …

      Add comment

    Name: 
    E-Mail: 
    Comment: 
    Enter code: 



    « July 2008
    MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
     123456
    78910111213
    14151617181920
    21222324252627
    28293031   

    Last added news

    Court order scuttles Dallas jail documentary

    Thank You For The Musical: ABBA foursome together again

    Long-lost director's cut of Metropolis unearthed and screened

    J.K. Rowling joins campaign against age labels on U.K. kid's lit

    Increased funding for Ont. festivals

    Curtain rises on Cronenberg's opera retelling of The Fly

    Russia will fund 'humanitarian, spiritual, patriotic' films, says culture minister

    Pop star Kylie Minogue honoured with OBE

    L.A. Times shedding 250 jobs

    Master of spectacle still seeking to break new ground

    All news | News archive | RSS feed

    Home    |    Add your site    |    Member login    |    Lost id    |    Contact Us    |    Help   |    Advertise    |    Privacy Policy

    © Top100biz Inc., 2004-2005. This site is powered by AlphaStoreDesign.com