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Limestone
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Limestone
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Fiona Farrell
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:240 | Dimensions(mm): Height 199,Width 130 |
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Category/Genre | Modern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945) |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781869791681
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Classifications | Dewey:823.2 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Random House New Zealand Ltd
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Imprint |
Vintage New Zealand
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Publication Date |
9 April 2009 |
Publication Country |
New Zealand
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Description
A fabulous multi-levelled novel, shortlisted for the Montana NZ Book Awards. Clare Lacey is on a quest. In Ireland to attend an art history conference, she sets out to find her father who walked out one day to buy a packet of cigarettes when she was a child, and disappeared. She is urged on her way by chance encounters: with a woman in a high tower, a blind man at a crossroads, a singer whose song she does not understand ...Clues lie all around on a labyrinth of walls - but the final clue lies deep within. With Irish roots and a nod to the Irish classic, The Year of the Hiker by John B. Keane, this is a contemporary novel about inheritance, belief, art, love ...and limestone.
Author Biography
Fiona Farrell is one of New Zealand's leading writers, publishing fiction, poetry, plays and non-fiction. She has also collaborated as a lyricist with some of New Zealand's leading composers. Born in Oamaru and educated at the universities of Otago and Toronto, she has published volumes of poetry, collections of short stories, non-fiction works, and many novels. In 2007 she received the New Zealand Prime Minister's Award for Fiction, and in the 2012 Queen's Birthday and Diamond Jubilee Honours List was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to literature. Farrell has been a guest at many arts festivals throughout New Zealand, and has also appeared at the Edinburgh International Book Festival and the Vancouver International Writers' Festival. Farrell has won many awards, including the inaugural Bruce Mason Award for Playwrights, the 2011 Burns Fellowship, and the 1995 Mansfield Fellowship in Menton. Critics describe her work as richly textured, lucid, energetic and original, rich in detail, deeply pleasurable, unpredictable, brilliant. See more at www.fionafarrell.com. Her debut novel The Skinny Louie Book won the New Zealand Book Award for Fiction in 1992. Three subsequent novels - The Hopeful Traveller, Book Book and Limestone - have been shortlisted for the award. These novels, along with Mr Allbones' Ferrets, were also each nominated for the International Dublin IMPAC Award. Her short fiction has appeared in major anthologies in New Zealand and also abroad, in the company of work by writers such as Alice Munro and Hanif Kureishi. Farrell's poems feature in many major anthologies, including The Oxford Book of New Zealand Poetry, The Penguin Book of New Zealand Poetry and Bloodaxe's bestselling Being Alive. Her third collection, The Popup Book of Invasions - critically received by Iain Sharpe in the Sunday Star Times as 'superlative, bursting with ideas presented with warmth, wit and humanity' - was shortlisted for the 2008 Book Awards. The Broken Book, a book of essays relating to the Christchurch earthquake, was shortlisted for the non-fiction award in the 2011 Book Awards and critically greeted as the 'first major artwork' to emerge from the event. Her plays include the satiric comedy, Chook Chook, one of Playmarket New Zealand's most frequently requested scripts. Her work, which The New Zealand Herald has praised for its 'richness - of both theme and languages', has been published around the world, including in the US, Canada and the UK. In his New Zealand Herald review of Limestone, David Hill said that Farrell 'writes richly, sensuously. She adds things in, rather than leaving things out ... the plot is springy and inventive, characters are engaging (or engagingly repellent), language is witty, chatty, and flecked with that characteristic Fiona Farrell subversive mischief.' The Sunday Star Times wrote of Book Book: 'There's something quotable on every page ... a deeply pleasurable, one-of-its-kind masterpiece.' Beryl Fletcher, in the Waikato Times, praised Farrell for having '... the rare ability of turning the mundane events of domestic life into profound human experiences. Her writing is poetic, moving and literary.'
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