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         White Patrick:     more books (100)
  1. Patrick White Letters by Patrick White, 1996-06-15
  2. The Solid Mandala (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics) by Patrick White, 1994-02-01
  3. Mountie in Mukluks: The Arctic Adventures of Bill White by Patrick White, 2004-10-14
  4. Decomposing Suburbia: Patrick White's Perversity.(gay author): An article from: Australian Literary Studies by Andrew McCann, 1998-10-01
  5. John Ozoga's Whitetail Intrigue: Scientific Insights for White-Tailed Deer Hunters by John J. Ozoga, Patrick Durkin, 2000-05
  6. The Rocks and Sticks of Words. Style, Discourse and Narrative Structure in the Fiction of Patrick White. (Cross/Cultures) by Gordon Collier, 1992-01
  7. Patrick White und die journalistische Literaturkritik in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland im Vergleich mit Grossbritannien (Duisburger Studien) (German Edition) by Karin Teetzmann, 1993
  8. History of Clare and the Dalcassian Clans of Tipperary, Limerick, and Galway ...: With an Ancient and a Modern Map by Patrick White, 2010-04-04
  9. The Complete Mission: Impossible Dossier by Patrick J. White, 1991
  10. Professional Techniques for Black & White Digital Photography by Patrick Rice, 2005-02-01
  11. PATRICK WHITE (Australian Playwrights Monograph Series) by May-Brit Akerholt, 1988-01
  12. Patrick White (Australian Writers) by Simon During, 1996-07-18
  13. Dissociation and Wholeness in Patrick Whites Fiction by Laurence Steven, 1989-08-01
  14. LETTERS OF PATRICK WHITE by PATRICK WHITE, 1995

21. PATRICK WHITE IN PERIODICALS: INDEX
1 7 GREEN, DOROTHY ESSAY RE- patrick white'S EYE OF THE STORM, 1973 1 39 GREEN,DOROTHY - ESSAY patrick white'S nobel PRIZE, 1974 2 8 HADGRAFT, CECIL
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INDEX TO PATRICK WHITE IN PERIODICALS
"CHARACTER OF 'VOSS'" - ARTICLE BY MACAINSH, NOEL, 1982 2 16 "CHEERY SOUL" - BY WHITE, PATRICK - REVIEW BY ROSENTHAL, T.G., 1965 1 3 "CHEERY SOUL" - LONG STORY BY WHITE, PATRICK, 1962 1 20 "CHEERY SOUL" - PLAY BY WHITE, PATRICK - REVIEW:MACARTNEY, KEITH, 1964 1 29 ...
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22. PATRICK WHITE IN PERIODICALS: INDEX
patrick white'S MYTH OF THE ARTIST ARTICLE BY MACAINSH, NOEL, 1985 2 18 patrickwhite'S nobel PRIZE - ESSAY BY GREEN, DOROTHY, 1974 2 8 patrick white'S
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INDEX TO PATRICK WHITE IN PERIODICALS
"PATRICK WHITE AND ROMANTICISM: 'THE VIVISECTOR'" - DOCKER, JOHN, 1973 2 32 "PATRICK WHITE IN 'SOUTHERLY': SOME EARLIER REFERENCES" - ARTICLE 1965 2 22 "PATRICK WHITE IN GERMAN" - ESSAY BY HELTAY, HILLARY, 1973 2 34 "PATRICK WHITE" - BOOK BY COLMER, JOHN - REVIEW BY EDGAR, SUZANNE 1986 1 6 ...
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23. Why Bother With Patrick White?
Producer's note. patrick white was a great writer and an Australian. He is theonly Australian writer yet to have won the nobel Prize for literature.
http://arts.abc.net.au/white/info.html

Producers note
Sitemap Credits Bibliography Producer's note Patrick White was a great writer and an Australian. He is the only Australian writer yet to have won the Nobel Prize for literature. Many Australians though have not even heard of him and his work seems to have been pushed back into the unreachable shelves of bookcases. During his lifetime his writing was sometimes called 'unAustralian' and his style was criticised as being 'intellectual' meaning not for the ordinary Australian reader. The negative criticisms seem to have hung on even after his style and breadth of topic developed, and as the literary awards and comparisons came through. People still think Patrick White is a British writer and a boring one at that. I wish they could hear the raucous laughter he can cause a reader, the sighs of recognition and the rapture. I read my first Patrick White in 1971 when I first arrived in Australia. I reread The Tree of Man fifteen years later to see if it had the same impact. It did. I have since read and reread all his novels but one. I wish I could share the pleasure they have given me.

24. Why Bother With Patrick White?
The Eye of the Storm was launched in London in late August and due out in Australiain October but while white awaited its release, the nobel Committee in
http://arts.abc.net.au/white/life/life6/life_F06.html
In the first months of 1973 White was busy tying up loose ends of short stories and correcting proofs for The Eye of the Storm . He also wrote the first draft of a new short story called 'The Cockatoos'. He would dedicate the collection to his red-haired schoolmate from Cheltenham and lifelong friend, Ron Waters. The Eye of the Storm was launched in London in late August and due out in Australia in October but while White awaited its release, the Nobel Committee in Sweden awarded him their 1973 Prize for Literature. study at Martin Road
'The battering began, front and back, dogs barking from laundry and kennel as the representatives of the media tramped around outside the house. Shouting. A trendy female reporter roused a neighbour with whom she was acquainted, to plead with me to expose myself in the middle of the night. Shouting, tramping continued. A bunch of them camped on the front lawn with their lights and cameras. They only went away on realising my stubbornness surpassed theirs. 'I kept my word, went out at the promised hour, and received the returning media. I sat on the front veranda, or was dragged out on the lawn by those who wanted full light. I was no longer a human being. I was the object their profession demanded. Questions were asked interminably. How ridiculous many of these were did not matter in the least; the pervs and parasites had to get on with their job. I sat all day answering questions, facing cameras, till seven o'clock in the evening, when our visitors started trailing off...

25. Marr, David: Patrick White Letters
patrick white (19121990), Australian novelist and playwright, wonthe nobel Prize in Literature in 1973. His many novels include
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Marr, David, editor Patrick White Letters . x, 678 p., 19 line drawings. 1994 Cloth USA $35.00 0-226-89503-3 Spring 1996 "Letters are the devil, and I always hope that any I have written have been destroyed."Patrick White Patrick White spent his whole life writing letters. He wanted them all burnt, but thousands survive to reveal him as one of the greatest letter-writers of his time. Patrick White: Letters is an unexpected and final volume of prose by Australia's most acclaimed novelist. Only a few scraps of White's letters have been published before. From the aftermath of the First World War until his death in 1990, letters poured from White's pen: they are shrewd, funny, dramatic, pigheaded, camp, and above all, hauntingly beautiful. He wrote novels to sway a hostile world, but letters were for friends. The culmination of ten years' work and reflection by David Marr, author of the well-received biography Patrick White: A Life , the volume tells the story of White's life in his own words. These are the letters of a great writer, a profound critic, a gossip with the sharpest eyes and tongue, a man who loved and hated ferociously, a keen cook, an angry patriot, and a believer never free of doubt.

26. White, Patrick. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
2001. white, patrick. 1912–90, Australian novelist, b. London. In1973, white was awarded the nobel Prize in Literature. 1.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/wh/White-Pa.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. White, Patrick

27. White, Patrick. The American Heritage® Dictionary Of The English Language: Four
white, patrick. DATES 1912–1990. He won the 1973 nobel Prize for literature.The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition.
http://www.bartleby.com/61/54/W0125400.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference American Heritage Dictionary White, E(lwyn) B(rooks) ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.

28. White, Patrick
white, patrick. white, patrick, 1912–90, Australian novelist, b. London. In1973, white was awarded the nobel Prize in Literature.
http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0852087

29. AFOL Patrick White Biographical Notes
patrick white was the 1973 nobel Laureate in Literature for an epic and psychologicalnarrative art which has introduced a new continent into literature. .
http://www.git.com.au/~paulw/afol/afolbiog.html
A Fringe of Leaves
Patrick White:
Various bits and pieces from a range of sources Patrick White was the 1973 Nobel Laureate in Literature "for an epic and psychological narrative art which has introduced a new continent into literature." "Patrick Victor Martindale White was an Australian citizen born abroad on May 28, 1912, in London, England. His parents were Victor Matindale White and Ruth Withycombe. White had spent most of his boyhood in Australia, but returned to England to study languages at King's College, Cambridge University, where he received his B.A. in 1935. During the Second World War he joined the Royal Air Force, serving as an intelligence officer in the Middle East. After the war, he returned to Sydney. "In 1973, White was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature for his realistic portrayal of Australian life in such novels as "The Eye of the Storm" and "Voss." His portrayals, described by the New York Times as often "harsh" and "unflattering" made him less popular with his countrymen than with readers abroad in England and the U.S. However, despite his criticism, for White, Australia was always his intellectual and spiritual homeland: "It's the country of my origins - that, I think, is what matters in the end, whether one likes it or not...it's from Australian earth, Australian air, that I derive my literary, my spiritual, sustenance. Even at its most hateful, Australia is necessary to me..." (New York Times, Obituaries, October 1, 1990). "An avowed socialist who was unafraid to criticize government, especially in its treatment of the Aborigines, White openly boycotted the 1988 celebrations commemorating two hundred years of white settlement in Australia.

30. OzLit@Vicnet - Patrick White Award
patrick white Award. Annual award sponsored by the late patrick white (who generouslyused his nobel Prize Award to establish a trust for this prize).
http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozlit/pwprize.html
Patrick White Award
A nnual award sponsored by the late Patrick White (who generously used his Nobel Prize Award to establish a trust for this prize). Writers who have been highly creative over a long period but have not received adequate recognition for their work are automatically eligible for this award without the necessity for submissions. Recipients of the award are:
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31. Patrick White
Translate this page Home_Page patrick white (1912-1990), Escritor australiano, premio nobel,nacido en Londres durante una de las visitas periódicas de sus padres.
http://www.epdlp.com/white.html
Patrick White
E scritor australiano, premio Nobel, nacido en Londres durante una de las visitas periódicas de sus padres. White volvió a Londres para asistir a la Universidad de Cambridge e ingresó en la Royal Air Force (RAF) durante la II Guerra Mundial (1939-1945). Su primera novela, El valle feliz (1939), está ambientada en Australia, como también sus famosas obras posteriores El árbol del hombre (1955), que trata de las dificultades de un granjero en las tierras salvajes de Australia, y Tierra ignota (1957); ambas consideradas como sus obras más destacadas y las que consolidaron su reputación. También escribió El carro de los elegidos Las esferas del mandala (1966) y El foco de la tempestad (1973). Simbólicas y alegóricas, tratan de la búsqueda individual del sentido de la existencia en un país duro y potencialmente brutal que busca su propia identidad. El caso Twyborn (1979) analiza la confusión sexual y espiritual, y termina en el bombardeo de Londres. En 1973 se convirtió en el primer australiano que ganó el Premio Nobel de Literatura por su "narrativa épica y psicológica que ha introducido un nuevo continente en la literatura". La crítica ha elogiado la gran originalidad de su estilo, indirecto pero dotado de un enorme poder descriptivo. Su autobiografía, Grietas en el cristal , se publicó en 1980. ©

32. SearchBiblio.com - Search For: White Patrick, Riders In The Chariot
white, patrick, Riders in the Chariot, Toronto, ON, Canada Penguin Books Canada,Limited, 1985. Trade Paperback. Good to Very Good. From the winner of the nobel
http://www.searchbiblio.com/cgi-bin/search.pl?author=White Patrick&title=Riders

33. RMIT - RMIT Union Arts Presents Patrick White's 'The Season At Sarsparilla'
Australia's only nobel Laureate, patrick white is famous for his criticismsof suburban Australia. However, The Season at Sarsaparilla
http://www.rmit.edu.au/browse/Media/News/Media Releases/by title/L-Z/R/RMIT Unio
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Academic Programs Admissions Careers ... Research Search Entire site Entire site, incl. images, multimedia... Home pages Staff and other contact details Academic programs [degrees, certificates...] Courses [subjects] Images, pdf, multimedia... Current location for Home Media News Media Releases ... RMIT Union Arts presents Patrick White's 'The Season at Sarsparilla'
July 21, 1999
RMIT Union Arts presents Patrick White's 'The Season at Sarsparilla'
Media Releases: RMIT Union Arts presents Patrick White's 'The Season at Sarsparilla'
RMIT Union Arts is proud to present Patrick White's The Season At Sarsaparilla.
Directed by Lynne Ellis, The Season at Sarsaparilla is a dark analysis of suburban Australia by one of our nation's most important writers PATRICK WHITE.
Opening on 29th July, this rare stage version of WHITE'S surreal and poetic text promises an inventive and unsettling theatrical experience.
Written between 1962 and 1965, The Season at Sarsaparilla was deemed too disturbing for critics and audiences of the time. This is not surprising as the show portrays the meaninglessness of suburban existence and uses a bitch on heat as a symbol of human repression, sex, and violence.
RMIT Union Arts has gathered a remarkably strong cast of student actors and designers to create a show that sees a meeting point between fine art and performance art.

34. Argus Aktuella Länkar [www.aktuella.nu]
Rebecca (eng) West, Nathanael (eng) Westlake, Donald (eng) Wharton, Edith (eng)Whilde, Stefan (sve) white, EB (eng) white, patrick (nobel 1973) (eng) Whitney
http://www.argus.nu/aktuella/index.php?forfattare=W&visa=forfattarew.php

35. BOOKS : ON PATRICK WHITE
Flaws In The Glass, the memoirs of patrick white, the Australian writerwho won the nobel Prize for Literature. Of course, I knew
http://www.gaybombay.cc/reading/books006.html
On Patric White document.write("")
On Patric White
Flaws In The Glass, the memoirs of Patrick White, the Australian writer who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Of course, I knew he was gay and had a relationship of over 40 years, till he died, with his partner, Amnoly Lascaris, but for some reason I'd got the idea that he was deeply repressed about it and refused to talk about it, and after he died Lascaris burned all his papers so it would never come out. ...one more thing before we drop Australia as a topic. Coincidentally, after sending that Austrlian images posting, I was in a bookshop and picked up a copy of Flaws In The Glass, the memoirs of Patrick White, the Australian writer who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Of course, I knew he was gay and had a relationship of over 40 years, till he died, with his partner, Amnoly Lascaris, but for some reason I'd got the idea that he was deeply repressed about it and refused to talk about it, and after he died Lascaris burned all his papers so it would never come out. But the memoirs show absolutely the opposite. White is quite open about discussing his homosexuality, and his relationship with Lascaris, and he seems to have absolutely no hang ups or conflicts about it. Of course, he's doing the writing here, so maybe he did and isn't saying, but its really quite moving the way he talks about Lascaris and the strength of their partnership in such an easy way.

36. NYRB: Patrick White
patrick white (19121990) was born in London and traveled to two men farmed theirsix acres while white worked on When he was awarded the nobel Prize in 1973
http://www.nybooks.com/nyrb/authors/4510
NYRB home About NYRB Authors Browse ... Introductions
Patrick White
Patrick White (1912-1990) was born in London and traveled to Sydney with his Australian parents six months later. White was a solitary, precocious, asthmatic child and at thirteen was sent to an English boarding school, a miserable experience. At eighteen he returned to Australia and worked as a jackaroo on an isolated sheep station. Two years later, he went up to Cambridge, settling afterwards in London, where he published his first two books. White joined the RAF in 1940 and served as an intelligence officer in the Middle East. At war's end, he and his partner, Manoly Lascaris, bought an old house in a Sydney suburb, where they lived with their four Schnauzers. For the next eighteen years, the two men farmed their six acres while White worked on some of his finest novels, including The Tree of Man Voss (1957), and Riders in the Chariot (1961). When he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1973, he did not attend the ceremony but, with his takings and some of his own money, created an award to help older writers who hadn't received their due: the first recipient was Christina Stead. Late in life, when asked for a list of his loves, White responded: "Silence, the company of friends, unexpected honesty, reading, going to the pictures, dreams, uncluttered landscapes, city streets, faces, good food, cooking small meals, whisky, sex, pugs, the thought of an Australian republic, my ashes floating off at last." Riders in the Chariot
Tender and lacerating, pure and profane, subtle and sweeping

37. The New York Review Of Books: Patrick White
patrick white (19121990) was born in London and traveled to two men farmed theirsix acres while white worked on When he was awarded the nobel Prize in 1973
http://www.nybooks.com/authors/4510
@import "/css/default.css"; Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books
Patrick White
Patrick White (1912-1990) was born in London and traveled to Sydney with his Australian parents six months later. White was a solitary, precocious, asthmatic child and at thirteen was sent to an English boarding school, a miserable experience. At eighteen he returned to Australia and worked as a jackaroo on an isolated sheep station. Two years later, he went up to Cambridge, settling afterwards in London, where he published his first two books. White joined the RAF in 1940 and served as an intelligence officer in the Middle East. At war's end, he and his partner, Manoly Lascaris, bought an old house in a Sydney suburb, where they lived with their four Schnauzers. For the next eighteen years, the two men farmed their six acres while White worked on some of his finest novels, including The Tree of Man Voss (1957), and Riders in the Chariot (1961). When he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1973, he did not attend the ceremony but, with his takings and some of his own money, created an award to help older writers who hadn't received their due: the first recipient was Christina Stead. Late in life, when asked for a list of his loves, White responded: "Silence, the company of friends, unexpected honesty, reading, going to the pictures, dreams, uncluttered landscapes, city streets, faces, good food, cooking small meals, whisky, sex, pugs, the thought of an Australian republic, my ashes floating off at last."

38. How Patrick White Laughed Last - Smh.com.au
Our greatest man of letters, patrick white, author of Voss, The Tree of Man andRiders In the Chariot, and the only Australian to win the nobel Prize for
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/04/02/1048962817787.html
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How Patrick White laughed last
April 3 2003 Curator Paul Brunton. Photo: Rick Stevens Our greatest man of letters was also the author of a clever deceit, or at least that's the theory. Steve Meacham reports. The scene: a grand house near Centennial Park in the winter of 1988. A distinguished but curmudgeonly looking 76-year-old man sits uncomfortably at a broad desk. Though it has been created for him, the desk is too small to contain his tall frame. His legs barely squeeze between the drawers. There's a portable Optima typewriter, but the man is purposefully scribbling with a red-inked ballpoint pen, adding waspish notes to himself which glare out of the page since the rest of the manuscript is written in blue pen. Occasionally, the old man allows himself a rare smile - rare because he is self-conscious about his false teeth and never parts his lips in public. Who is this man? Our greatest man of letters, Patrick White, author of

39. Patrick White, Painter Manque - Smh.com.au
Prior to his winning the nobel Prize his use of language as much as his But in PatrickWhite, Painter Manque, Helen Verity Hewitt rediscovers him, without the
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/12/20/1040174387934.html
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Patrick White, Painter Manque
Reviewed by Robin Wallace-Crabbe December 21 2002 PATRICK WHITE, PAINTER MANQUE: Paintings, Painters and Their Influence on His Writing By Helen Verity Hewitt Miegunyah Press, 181pp, $49.95. Patrick White's interest in the visual arts wasn't just one more of your average writer's cultural affectations - it was a consuming passion. He knew how disappointing words can seem, understood that proper or infelicitous grammatical moments do little more than signify social position or ambition: "I do think composers and musicians come closer to God, also some painters; it is the writer who deals in stubborn, colourless words who is always stumbling and falling." White, or Donald Black, as fellow author Hal Porter liked to call him, was into the mystic. Note, "some painters". Indeed, it turned out that holding White in thrall was "the artist" as much as the work of art; more than anything, he wanted to connect with the real creativity of painting. Prior to his winning the Nobel Prize his use of language as much as his ideological quirkiness grated on the sensibilities of a number of our suburban-grown literati.

40. Lynn Public Library - Nobel Prize Winners - Literature
WINNERS OF THE nobel PRIZE FOR LITERATURE. Click on the links below tofind their works in the catalog. 1973 white, patrick (Australian).
http://www.noblenet.org/lynn/nobellist.htm
WINNERS OF THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE
Click on the links below to find their works in the catalog. (Note that no award was given in the years and Imre Kertesz (Hungarian) V.S. Naipaul (British/Indian) Gao Xingjian (Chinese) Grass, Gunter (German) Saramago, Jose (Portuguese) Fo, Dario (Italian) Szymborska, Wislawa (Polish) Heaney, Seamus (Irish) Oe, Kenzaburo (Japanese) Morrison, Toni (American) Walcott, Derek (Saint Lucian) Gordimer, Nadine (South African) Paz, Octavio (Mexican) Cela, Camilo Jose (Spanish) Mahfouz, Naguib (Egyptian) Brodsky, Joseph (Russian-American) Soyinka, Wole (Nigerian) Simone, Claude (French) Siefert, Jaroslav (Czech) Golding, William (British) Garcia Marquez, Gabriel (Colombian-Mexican) Canetti, Elias (Bulgarian-British) Milosz, Czeslaw (Polish-American) Elytis, Odysseus (Greek) Singer, Isaac Bashevis (American) Aleixandre, Vicente (Spanish) Bellow, Saul (American) Montale, Eugenio (Italian) Johnson, Eyvind and Martinson, Harry Edmund (both Swedish) White, Patrick (Australian) Boll, Heinrich (German) Neruda, Pablo

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