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Search Results for: VIPREG2024 1xbet new promo code South Africa

Barbara Trapido

Barbara Trapido was born and educated in South Africa and emigrated to London in 1963. She now lives in Oxford with her husband, who is a university lecturer, and their…

Jonathan Kaplan

Jonathan Kaplan’s The Dressing Station was a New York Times Notable Book, a Washington Post Book World “Rave,” and winner of South Africa’s top literary honor, the Alan Paton Award….

Athol Fugard

Born in Middleburg, South Africa, in 1932, Athol Fugard has written, directed, and acted in over twenty plays, the most recent of which was Exits and Entrances….

Leo

by Deon Meyer

“Meyer is one of the unsung masters.”—Michael Connelly “Deon Meyer’s name on the cover is a guarantee of crime writing at its best.”—Tess Gerritsen In a corrupt South Africa, the…

Michael J. Stephen

…including a Massachusetts prison hospital and a pediatric HIV clinic in Cape Town, South Africa. A graduate of Brown University and Boston University Medical School, he lives in New Jersey….

Old World, New World

by Kathleen Burk

“This stunning and important work is destined to become the benchmark study of this topic for many years to come.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)…

Thunder Run

by David Zucchino

“Zucchino paints a vivid picture of the battle by stiching together the narratives of soldiers, officers, generals and Iraqis whom he interviewed during and after the war. . . ….

Asian Godfathers

by Joe Studwell

“A myth-shattering look at Southeast Asia’s powerful Chinese tycoons . . . A richly reported study of power and stunted economic development.” —BusinessWeek…

Rouse Up O Young Men of the New Age!

by Kenzaburo Oe

“Rouse Up is a series of linked, meditative stories that examine Nobel laureate Oe’s changing relationship with his adolescent brain-damaged son through the prism of [William] Blake’s poetry . ….

Grove New American Theatre

by Michael Feingold

“[Ethyl Eichelberger] is…a rare and idiosyncratic comic spirit . . . [He] punctured pretension while retaining his sense of the ridiculous.” –The New York Times…