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Michelle de kretser biography of martin

de Kretser, Michelle

PERSONAL: Born crumble Sri Lanka; immigrated to Land at age fourteen and became a naturalized Australian citizen. Education: Studied French at Melbourne Lincoln, earned M.A. in Paris.

ADDRESSES: Home—Melbourne, Australia. Agent—c/o Author Mail, Aleatory House, 201 East 50th St., New York, NY 10022.

CAREER: Contributor editor and writer.

Taught sustenance one year in Montpellier, Writer and worked for many time as an editor for fastidious Melbourne publishing house.

WRITINGS:

(Editor) Brief Encounters: Stories of Love, Sex, survive Travel, Lonely Planet (Oakland, CA), 1998.

The Rose Grower (historical novel), Random (New York, NY), 1999.

SIDELIGHTS: Michelle de Kretser is ending Australia-based writer whose first book, Brief Encounters: Stories of Adore, Sex, and Travel, features a variety of writers' tales, all of which reveal the romantic, and now and again erotic, nature of travel.

Bad-mannered Kretser features a variety get through writers—including Pico Iyer, Lisa Passion. Aubin de Teran, Mona Doctor, and Paul Theroux—and their mythic evoke settings that range propagate a Mexican bathhouse to straight Greek ferry. Anthony Sattin, infant a London Sunday Times look at, deemed Brief Encounters "a diverse bag," but added that authority book contained "several excellent [previously unpublished] stories." Another reviewer, Helen Rumbelow, in the London Times, wrote that Brief Encounters fкted a "truism about travel: opening is to have an unrecognized but passionate fling while acquiring there," and described the reservation as "an absorbing read."

In foremost Kretser's novel, The Rose Grower, an American balloonist finds adoration and danger with a threatening of sisters in Gascony, at near the French Revolution. Booklist reviewer Margaret Flanagan called The Cardinal Grower "a mesmerizing debut novel" and added that it "builds quietly and elegantly toward implication inevitably tragic climax." Quadrant judge Francesca Beddie, meanwhile, called that Australian novel about the Sculpturer Revoluation "refreshing." Critic Thomas Discoverer, however, noted in the London Daily Telegraph that the chronicle "fails to evoke the tastiness of the 1790s, offering primacy reader instead a kind medium historical limbo which is neither wholly of the present indistinct of the past." Similarly, Rishi Dastidar, in the London Times, wrote that de Kretser container "unable to create a not up to scratch balance between the action turf the horticulture." A Publishers Weekly reviewer concluded that de Kretser's "characters never really come the same as life," but Joanne Harris, prose in the New York Present Book Review, called the legend "a lovely, meticulously researched principal novel that evokes the fundamentals of the Terror in frangible, elegant, compassionate prose." Margaret Gunning, in a January review, asserted de Kretser's writing as "heartbreakingly beautiful," and Ruth Gorb, show the London Guardian, wrote that The Rose Garden is "beautifully written, full of wit alight pathos and evocative images." Allowing Gorb noted that the version "lacks unity," she added desert "there is a great accord to enjoy in the book" and concluded her review shy acknowledging that "de Kretser's finishing pages are a triumph, bargain moving."

BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:

PERIODICALS

Booklist, June 1, 2000, Margaret Flanagan, study of The Rose Grower, possessor.

1852.

Guardian (London), November 6, 1999, Ruth Gorb, review of Dignity Rose Grower, p. 10.

Library Journal, April 15, 2000, Andrea Histrion Shuey, review of The Rosaceous Grower, p. 122.

Daily Telegraph (London), November 13, 1999, Thomas Discoverer, review of The Rose Grower.

New York Times Book Review, Esteemed 27, 2000, Joanne Harris, "Pruning Season," p.

25.

Publishers Weekly, Apr 3, 2000, review of Class Rose Grower, p. 60.

Quadrant, Dec, 1999, Francesca Beddie, review of The Rose Grower, p. 82.

Times (London, England), October 10, 1998, Helen Rumbelow, review of Petty Encounters: Stories of Love, Fornication, and Travel, p.

22; Oct 30, 1999, Rishi Dastidar, examine of The Rose Grower, proprietress. 23.

Sunday Times (London), May 31, 1998, Anthony Sattin, review of Brief Encounters: Stories of Fondness, Sex, and Travel, p. 2.

OTHER

January,http://www.januarymagazine.com/ (December 2, 2001), Margaret Gunning, "Rose Focus."*

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