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Tim Pears

Autor von Die Farben eines Sommers

14+ Werke 977 Mitglieder 40 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 2 Lesern

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Beinhaltet den Namen: Tim Pears

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Werke von Tim Pears

Die Farben eines Sommers (1993) 222 Exemplare
Land der Fülle (1997) 194 Exemplare
The Horseman (2017) 114 Exemplare
Der Lauf der Sonne. (2000) 73 Exemplare
The Wanderers (2018) 72 Exemplare
Landed (2010) 65 Exemplare
The Redeemed (2019) 60 Exemplare
Wach auf! (2002) 53 Exemplare
Blenheim Orchard (2007) 43 Exemplare
Disputed Land (2011) 38 Exemplare
In the Light of Morning (1600) 26 Exemplare
Run to the Western Shore (2023) 10 Exemplare
Chemistry and Other Stories (2021) 6 Exemplare
The West Country Trilogy (2020) 1 Exemplar

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Slightly Foxed 67: A Separate World (2020) — Mitwirkender — 16 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Pears, Tim
Geburtstag
1956-11-15
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
UK
Wohnorte
Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
Berufe
novelist
Preise und Auszeichnungen
Lannan Literary Award (Fiction, 1996)
Agent
Victoria Hobbs (AM Heath)
Kurzbiographie
Tim Pears - Short Biography - 2005

Born in 1956, Tim Pears grew up in Devon, left school at sixteen and worked in a wide variety of jobs: farm labourer, nurse in a mental hospital, pianist's bodyguard, painter and decorator, video maker, college night porter, art gallery manager, and others.
His first novel, In the Place of Fallen Leaves, was published in 1993. It was awarded the Hawthornden Prize and the Ruth Hadden Memorial Award. Also in 1993 Tim Pears graduated from the Direction course at the National Film and Television School. He has written the script for a feature film, Loop, which was released in 1999.
In 1996 Tim received a Lannan Award, in America.
His second novel, In a Land of Plenty, was published in 1997. It was made into a ten part drama series for the BBC by Sterling Pictures (with TalkBack Productions) and broadcast in 2001.
A Revolution of the Sun was published in 2000, Wake Up in 2002, and Blenheim Orchard in 2007 by Bloomsbury.
These novels have been variously published in America, France, Germany and Denmark.
Tim Pears was Writer in Residence at Cheltenham Festival of Literature, 2002-03, and is Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Oxford Brookes University 2006-08. He has taught a good deal of creative writing, most recently at Ruskin College, Oxford, in which city he lives with his wife and children.

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A cross-eyed Devonian party girl relocated to Brixton, a mad scientist experimenting on animals at the Department of Organology in Oxford, a hen-pecked HGV driver from Birmingham, a would-be Cornish wrestler turned cat burglar of no fixed abode, a single father of a disabled son stuck in Crapton Towers in the wastelands of Manchester, an amnesiac who wakes up every morning not knowing who or where he is and a Bradford spinster who works in an animal sanctuary shop.
Bizarre coincidences, tragic events and pure chance throw this motley crew together dramatically changing their lives for better and worse over the course of a revolution of the sun.
A huge cast of supporting characters and extras play their part in keeping the wheels turning and provide welcome light relief to the sometimes sad, dark, pathetic and disturbing pasts and presents of the protagonists.
Humourous and thought-provoking, this is a cleverly constructed and highly detailed novel that has a little bit of everything.
It isn’t the easiest of reads but well worth reading and, apart from a few extremely scientific sections that went right over my head, kept me hooked from start to finish.
What a difference a year makes.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
geraldine_croft | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 21, 2024 |
Two young people escape enslavement together and run. One is the daughter of a celtic tribe leader and the other is the slave of Sextus Julius Frontius, Roman governor of Britain.

The two run, not really sure where they are running to, and meet a range of people on their journey: shepherds who feed them; young drunken men who have to be fooled and a couple who hunt, eat and wear beavers. At last they come to the sea only to be met by Frontius.

Olwen is taken away, Quintus remains a slave but having been free no longer wants to be. And so he slips past the guard and heads for the sea where he sets off swimming.

This book reminded me of The Vaster Wilds by Lauren Groff. It's another journey across land by an enslaved person from a writer who is known, and who I love, for his depictions of the landscape and animals. Like Groff, Pears' characters are there to be put back into history those who have been ignored. By bring people from two different cultures together, Pears can explain the bumps in the land and the behaviours of animals but it does become a bit lecture-y at times.

I didn't feel that this book was as good as his West Country trilogy - it feels more like a young adult book - and whilst it combines all of the things that Pears writes so well about, for me, it misses the mark.
… (mehr)
½
 
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allthegoodbooks | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 2, 2024 |
Proud chieftan's daughter Olwen is made part of a peace settlement with the invading Roman forces. However Olwen has other thoughts and escapes from the camp taking slave Quintus with her. Quintus is from the other side of the empire and has an ear for languages, the two try to flee across Wales learning to survive in the countryside and reach the sea in the hope of finding passage abroad. But Olwen has unleashed the might of Roman revenge on herself and her people.
This is a quite short novel which packs a real punch. The story of the two escapees come lovers is simple enough but woven around this tale are two huge themes. The first one is the inheritance of the Welsh and the Celtic myths of their homeland which are presented as the story of Olwen's forebears and incorporate druidic culture. The second is the love of the Welsh countryside, described in detail and woven around the narrative.… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
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pluckedhighbrow | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 29, 2023 |
I really wanted to like this book, but alas it was not to be. The story is set in the period when Rome has invaded Britannia and is steadily pushing west bringing more tribes to heel by force or diplomacy. It follows a celtic princess who is married off to the Roman governor as part of a peace deal, she however has other ideas. Instead on her wedding night she flees the camp taking with her a slave translator. We then follow their journey across country to the river Severn and across into Wales. And that is pretty much it. There are a few nice descriptions of landscape but otherwise the journey is rather pointless and by the time we reached the end I was very glad to see the back of the two fugitives.

There is a reason why I am always nervous of historical-fiction, the somewhat flagrant disregard for basic facts, this book was no exception. Take for example our meeting with a lone druid and his apprentice who have a Totem pole! So we have imported indigenous North American practices into Gloucestershire where there is not a shred of evidence the native Britons has anything even equivalent. The town our interpreting slave came from didn't get subsumed into the Roman Empire until the following century and were hostile to Rome at the time, and the Roman governor never visited being too busy playing politics in Europe. Basic fact checking would have resolved these and many other issues.

An interesting premise poorly executed.
… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
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Cotswoldreader | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 28, 2023 |

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