Reading with Style discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Archives
>
Winter 14/15 20.8 - Exiles and Emmigrants


Jhumpa Lahiri, who is of Indian descent, was born in the UK, is now a US citizen living in the US.
Marguerite Yourcenar, Belgian, also of French heritage, lived most of her life on Mount Desert Island, Maine.

At that time, all of Ireland was part of the UK, but it isn't now, and I think we usually go by current national borders for tasks?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masha_Ge...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_...
Are his books approved for this task?

Michael Ondaatje works, as does Masha Gessen.

OK, thanks Jama!

She was born 1932 in Boston, Mass. After marrying Ted Hughes in 1956, according to Wiki, "The couple moved back to the United Kingdom in December 1959 and lived in London at 3 Chalcot Square", and then in Devon (also UK). Following Hughes' affair, the couple split and "In December 1962, she returned alone to London with their children, and rented, on a five-year lease, a flat at 23 Fitzroy Road". Sadly, Sylvia killed herself in 1963, but the five-year lease would suggest that she intended to remain in the UK.
Here's the link -> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Plath

I think he's returned to the US but it does mention that he lived in the UK as an ex-pat for twenty years.

"Garcia Marquez was cremated at a private family ceremony in Mexico City. On 22 April, the presidents of Colombia and Mexico attended a formal ceremony in Mexico City, where Garcia Marquez had lived for more than three decades."



Thanks for your input!

Terry Hayes born in England, lived in the US and now in Sydney, Australia
Emily St. John Mandel born and raised in Canada and now lives in New York
Isabel Allende born in Peru, lived in Chile and now US
Italo Calvino born in Cuba, lived in Italy
Alexander McCall Smith born in Zimbabwe, now in Scotland
Oliver Sacks born in England, lives in the US
Derek B. Miller born in US, has lived abroad since 1996 in Israel, England, Hungary, Switzerland, and Norway.
Kazuo Ishiguro born in Japan, lives in England
Rohinton Mistry born in India, lives in Canada

Terry Hayes born in England, lived in the ..."
I can answer some of these:
Ishiguro was born in Japan, to Japanese parents, and the family immigrated to the UK when he was young -- he works. As would Ministry.
McCall Smith, born in the British colony of Southern Rhodesia to British parents, does not work. Neither would Doris Lessing's The Grass is Singing.

Jayme(the ghost reader) wrote: "I was wondering if


Gabriel Garcia Marquez works
I am Malala works as well.
Marlon James works.
Oscar Wilde works.
Give me a minute, Karen Michele, and I will check yours.

Niall Williams, who returned to Ireland after spending some time in the U.S.
Italo Calvino, whose parents were Italian, and who returned with Calvino to Italy when he was two.
And McCall Smith, who was a british colonist who eventually returned to Great Britan (always a British subject).
The rest work.


From the Goodreads bio blurb about Troyat: "Troyat was born Levon Aslan Torossian in Moscow to parents of Armenian descent. His family fled Russia in anticipation of revolution. After a long exodus taking them to the Caucasus on to Crimea and later by sea to Constantinople and then Venice, the family finally settled in Paris in 1920, where young Troyat was schooled and later earned a law degree."
Also -- I think that Colin Cotterill works for this task too. Born in England, but has lived and worked in SE Asia for many years now. Currently lives with this wife on the Gulf of Siam.

Niall Williams, who returned to Ireland after spending some time in the U.S.
Italo Calvino, whose parents were Italian, and who returned..."
Thanks - that all makes sense!

Jama wrote: "So sorry about the delay!
Gabriel Garcia Marquez works
I am Malala works as well.
Marlon James works.
Oscar Wilde works.
Give me a minute, Karen Michele, and I will check yours."

"I was born in Canada, and moved to the States when I was 26. I went to college in the US and then entered the (then) M.A. in Writing Popular Fiction program at Seton Hill University. My first book-length sale was my master’s thesis—a romance novel that was released by Harlequin the following year. The program changed to an MFA, so last year I did the extra coursework for the terminal degree. This time, my thesis was a steampunk YA novel—Lady of Devices."
While her profile says she travels the world, can we assume this move from Canada to US will suffice for this task?


Moved to London after graduating from Oberlin in 1984. I had studied for a semester in London and thought it was a great place, so came over for fun, expecting to go back to the US after 6 months to get serious. I’m still in London, and still not entirely serious. Even have dual citizenship – though I keep the American accent intact.


Read a book written by an author who has more or less permanently settled in a country other than his/her homeland (the country of his/her original citiz..."
If a book has two authors, do both have to be an exile/emigrant to count for Combo points, or will one do?

We will look at the first author named to comply with this task.

We will look at the first author named to comply with this task."
Thanks, Elizabeth. That seems simple and clear (even if it's my second author who is the exile, sigh).

A nation of immigrants works as well.

It has some history of the Aboriginal people in Australia and how they were displaced in their own land by the arrival of the British -- then flashes forward to 1931 when three 'half-caste' girls were taken from their Aboriginal families and sent to a Settlement school where they were supposed to be trained to be house servants for white families. The girls fled the school and travelled across a great swath of Australia to rejoin their families.
I think that they had an exile experience in their own land! Whattya think?

This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Jungle Books (other topics)The Jungle Books (other topics)
The Jungle Books (other topics)
Conquering the Impossible: My 12,000-Mile Journey Around the Arctic Circle (other topics)
Lady Molly of Scotland Yard (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Derek B. Miller (other topics)Derek B. Miller (other topics)
Marguerite Duras (other topics)
M.L. Stedman (other topics)
Alan Cumming (other topics)
More...
Read a book written by an author who has more or less permanently settled in a country other than his/her homeland (the country of his/her original citizenship). Or read a fiction or non-fiction account of an immigrant or political exile's experiences.