Francesca Segal

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Francesca Segal

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Born
London, The United Kingdom
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Member Since
February 2012

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Winner of the 2012 Costa Prize for First Fiction.
Winner of the 2012 National Jewish Book Award for Fiction
Winner of the 2013 Sami Rohr Prize
Winner of the 2013 Premio Letterario Edoardo Kihlgren Opera Prima in Milan
Winner of the 2013 Harold U. Ribalow Prize

Long-listed for the 2013 Women's Prize for Fiction

Francesca Segal is an award-winning writer and journalist. Her work has appeared in Granta, the Guardian, the Financial Times, and both American and British Vogue, amongst others. She has been a features writer at Tatler, and for three years wrote the Debut Fiction column in the Observer.
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Average rating: 3.6 · 16,347 ratings · 2,286 reviews · 11 distinct worksSimilar authors
Sense and Sensibility

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Love Story

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3.65 avg rating — 64,120 ratings — published 1969 — 4 editions
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The Innocents

3.20 avg rating — 5,716 ratings — published 2012 — 37 editions
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Welcome to Glorious Tuga

3.88 avg rating — 3,944 ratings — published 2024 — 14 editions
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The Awkward Age

3.27 avg rating — 2,627 ratings — published 2017 — 19 editions
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Island Calling

4.21 avg rating — 741 ratings4 editions
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Mother Ship

4.48 avg rating — 607 ratings — published 2019 — 10 editions
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Entscheidungen auf Tuga

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4.23 avg rating — 13 ratings
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L'età ingrata - Anteprima g...

3.67 avg rating — 6 ratings
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The Innocents by Francesca ...

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More books by Francesca Segal…
Welcome to Glorious Tuga Island Calling
(2 books)
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3.93 avg rating — 4,684 ratings

The Pale King
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A Passage to India
Francesca Segal is currently reading
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Half of a Yellow Sun
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Quotes by Francesca Segal  (?)
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“The marriage of a Jewish son is a bittersweet prospect. There is relief, always, that he has navigated the tantalizing and plentiful assemblies of non-Jewish women to whom the children of the Diaspora are inevitably exposed: from the moment he enters secondary school there is the constant anxiety that a blue-eyed Christina or Mary will lure him away from the tribe. Jewish men are widely known to be uxorious in all the most advantageous ways. And so each mother fears that, whether he be short and myopic, boorish or stupid or prone to discuss his lactose intolerance with strangers, whether he be blessed with a beard rising almost to meet his hairline, he is still within the danger zone. Somewhere out there is a shiksa with designs on her son. Jewish men make good husbands. It is the Jewish woman's blessing as a wife, and her curse as a mother.”
Francesca Segal, The Innocents

“It had been the most relaxed that either of them had been for as long as he could remember--certainly since their engagement. Rachel had spun and twittered for the first few days, disoriented without a wedding as the epicenter of her near future. But the pleasure of the postmortem and of being, finally, just the two of them, had aided her recovery. By the end of the first week she was almost convincing when she said brightly, 'I'm so glad it's all over and we get to get on with normal life!' She had repeated this assertion a lot since they'd arrived, but that had been the first time that she hadn't sounded crestfallen.”
Francesca Segal, The Innocents

“There are not so many good things in life that people want to miss them.”
Francesca Segal, The Innocents

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