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David Lodge | |
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About 108 pages (32,347 words) in 11 products |
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| Name: |
David Lodge | | Birth Date: |
January 28, 1935 | | Place of Birth: |
England | | Nationality: |
English | | Gender: |
Male | | Occupations: |
author |
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Biography of David Lodge
1,248 words, approx. 4 pages
 The English author, David Lodge (born 1935), wrote novels that frequently reflected his class-consciousness, Catholic background, and/or his life in academia. David Lodge was born on January 28, 1935, to working-class Catholic parents, William...
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Biography of David (John) Lodge
14,052 words, approx. 47 pages
 David Lodge is the author of some of the most clever, ambitious, and funny fiction written in England during the past four decades. His fifth novel, Changing Places: A Tale of Two Campuses (1975), won the Hawthornden Prize and the Yorkshire Post...
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Biography of David (John) Lodge
8,306 words, approx. 28 pages
 David Lodge is the author of some of the most clever, ambitious, and funny fiction written in England during the past quarter century. His fifth novel, Changing Places: A Tale of Two Campuses (1975), won the Hawthornden Prize and the Yorkshire Post...



Encyclopedia and Summary Information
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David Lodge Information
661 words, approx. 2 pages
 David Lodge CBE, (born January 28, 1935 at London, England) is a British...


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 Evening Standard - London
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 The Washington Post
THINKS . . . By David Lodge ...
06/03/2001: 1,480 words, approx. 5 pages THINKS . . . By David Lodge Viking. 342 pp. $24.95 "The term 'novel of ideas,' " wrote David Lodge in The Art of Fiction, "usually suggests a book light on narrative interest, in which abnormally articulate characters bat philosophical questions...
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 The New York Observer
Sage of Anxiety
3/27/2005: 3,045 words, approx. 10 pages On Jan. 31, 2005, the BBC made it official: On the evening news, the anchor gravely announced the publication of Ian McEwan's new novel, Saturday, and proclaimed the author "the international voice of British fiction." As far as anyone in London publishing circles can remember,...



Literary Criticism
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Critical Review by Denis Donoghue
2,153 words, approx. 7 pages
 In the following review, Donoghue finds Lodge's collection of writings in Write On uneven. Donoghue also discusses the role of metaphor in literature and criticism.
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Critical Review by R. B. Kershner
1,696 words, approx. 6 pages
 In the following review, Kershner offers a positive evaluation of After Bakhtin. Though noting that the volume offers few new observations concerning Bakhtin's work, Kershner praises Lodge's analysis and recommends the collection for general academic readers and students of dialogic criticism.
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Critical Review by Peter Kemp
1,246 words, approx. 4 pages
 In the following unfavorable review of The Art of Fiction, Kemp finds shortcomings in the volume's lack of focus and consistency.


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David Lodge | |
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About 108 pages (32,347 words) in 11 products |
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