copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
William Trevor | Biography, Books, Facts | Britannica William Trevor (born May 24, 1928, Mitchelstown, County Cork, Ireland—died November 20, 2016, Somerset, England) was an Irish writer who was noted for his wry and often macabre short stories and novels
William Trevor - Literature - British Council William Trevor is one of the most prolific writers to have emerged from modern Ireland Acclaimed as both novelist and short-story writer, he is somewhat unusual in having maintained the two forms in tandem, rather than using one – the story – as an apprenticeship for a mature career in the other – the novel
William Trevor: Irish writer interview - IrishCentral William Trevor, the beloved, brilliant and prolific Irish writer, died aged 88 on November 20, 2016 Celebrating the great writer's legacy, here we recall a 2009 interview with Trevor, on the
William Trevor: A Short-Story Masters Life Work - NPR William Trevor has been writing for more than 50 years and has won more literary awards than we have time to list here Trevor has published 14 novels, but he is even more celebrated
William Trevor | The Booker Prizes William Trevor was born in Mitchelstown, Ireland He wrote many novels, and was a renowned writer of short stories His novels won numerous awards, including the Hawthornden Prize and the Whitbread Book of the Year Award Four of his novels have been shortlisted for the Booker Prize
Remembering William Trevor - Literary Hub William Trevor, beloved master of the short story, died on Sunday at age 88 Known for his luminous documentation of ordinary life in English and Irish villages, Trevor was a three-time Whitbread Prize winner, recipient of the Irish PEN Award, and was nominated multiple times for the Booker Prize, though never awarded it
The Art of Fiction No. 108 - The Paris Review William Trevor first achieved prominence with the publication of his second novel, The Old Boys (1964); but perhaps he is best known for his volumes of short stories, including The Day We Got Drunk on Cake (1968), Angel at the Ritz and Other Stories (1976), winner of the Royal Society of Literature Award, and The News from Ireland (1986) His
William Trevor, my father: ‘Writing was what kept him going’ The writer William Trevor: “The only time I knew him to be unhappy was near the end, when he couldn’t write any longer ” Photograph: Frank Miller Dominic Cox Thu May 24 2018 - 01:00 Dad