The Englishman's Wife

The Englishman's Wife
Author: Louis Sanders
Publisher:
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2003
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

More skullduggery set in France. Follows Sanders' successful debut Death in the Dordogne.

A Black Englishman

A Black Englishman
Author: Carolyn Slaughter
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 356
Release: 2005-11-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780312424282

"Isabel, a young woman in flight from the ravages of the Great War, throws herself headlong into a passionate and dangerous liaison with Sam, an Indian doctor, and Oxford graduate - but their devotion to one another takes them across the length and breadth of India and to the brink of disaster. This powerful and erotic love story combines the urgent and contemporary themes of colonial exploitation, race and sexuality, and compellingly explores the many forms of partition - secular and religious - that infect and endanger the modern world."--Publisher.

The Englishman's Greek Concordance of the New Testament

The Englishman's Greek Concordance of the New Testament
Author: George V. Wigram
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1164
Release: 1903
Genre: Bible
ISBN:

This work is an attempt at a verbal connexion between the Greek and the English texts of the New Testament. The plan proposed was this: to present, in alphabetical succession, every word which occurs in the Greek New Testament, with the series of passages (quoted from the English translation) in which each such word occurs; the word or words exhibiting the Greek word under immediate consideration being printed in italic letters. Schmid's Concordance to the New Testament was taken as the basis. - Introduction to the first edition.

One Fat Englishman

One Fat Englishman
Author: Kingsley Amis
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2013-09-17
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1590176898

The hero of One Fat Englishman, a literary publisher and lapsed Catholic escaped from the pages of Graham Greene to the campus of Budweiser College in provincial Pennsylvania, is philandering, drunken, bigoted, and very very fat, not to mention in a state of continuous spluttering rage against everything, not least his own overgrown self. In America, Roger Micheldene must deal with not so obliging suburban housewives, aspiring Jewish novelists who as good as clean his clock, stray deer, bad cigars, children who beat him at Scrabble (“It was no wonder that people were horrible when they started life as children”), and America itself, while making ever-more desperate and humiliating overtures to Helen, a Scandinavian ice queen. If only Roger would dare to show some real feeling of his own. This comic masterpiece—about the 1950s crashing drunkenly into the consumerist 1960s and a final scion of a disintegrating Old World empire encountering its upstart New World offspring—is one of Kingsley Amis’s greatest and most caustic performances.