The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje

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The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje

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The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje

Michael Ondaatje's Booker Prize-winning best seller lyrically portrays the convergence of four damaged lives in a bomb-riddled Italian villa in the last days of the war. Hana, the grieving nurse; the maimed thief, Caravaggio; the emotionally detached Indian sapper, Kip--each is haunted in different ways by the riddle of the man they know only as the English patient, a nameless burn victim who lies swathed in bandages in an upstairs room. It is this man's incandescent memories--of the bleak North African desert, of explorers' caves and Bedouin tribesmen,
of forbidden love, and of annihilating anger--that illuminate the story, and the consequences of the mysteries they reveal radiate outward in shock waves that leave all the characters forever changed.
Author of eleven books of poetry, four novels and a fictionalized memoir, Michael Ondaatje was born in 1943 in Colombo, capital of the British colony of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). Of Tamil, Sinhalese and Dutch descent, he was the youngest of four children. He grew up during the halcyon days of colonial Ceylon on the Kutapitiya tea estate, the most beautiful place in the world, as he described in an interview with The Guardian. His mother's real gift to Michael was her enthusiasm for the arts. Of his father, who served in the Ceylon light infantry, Ondaatje has said: My father was in tea and alcohol; he dealt in tea and he drank the alcohol. He died of a brain hemorrhage after Michael had left Sri Lanka, so Michael never got to know his father as an adult. He is still one of those books we long to read whose pages remain uncut. He was a sad and mercurial figure. There was a lot I didn't know about him ... In all my books there are mysteries that are not fully told.

When Michael was five his parents separated. His mother soon went to England with two of her children; Michael stayed behind and lived with relatives, joining his mother and siblings at the age of eleven. He relinquished his sarong and donned a tie - an item of clothing he'd never seen before - to attend Dulwich College, whose alumni include writers Graham Swift, P. G. Wodehouse and Raymond Chandler. (One of Michael's former teachers expressed surprise when Ondaatje won the Booker, since he had always seemed more interested in cricket.) In 1962, at the age of nineteen, he went to Quebec, where his brother Christopher (today a businessman and explorer) was living. It was in Canada that Michael Ondaatje's writing life began in earnest: [Y]ou felt you could do anything. I wouldn't have been a writer if I'd stayed in England ... where you feel, what right do you have to do this because of John Donne and Sir Philip Sidney. England felt repressive in the fifties ... Moving, you learn twice as much; it doubles you in some way, like living three or four lives.

Ondaatje obtained a B.A. from the University of Toronto and an M.A. from Queen's University, then taught at the University of Western Ontario and at York University. In the seventies he edited poetry, produced anthologies and critical works and short documentary films, and began his involvement with the small press Coach House.

Although he was thrust onto the world stage by the tremendous success of The English Patient, Ondaatje, who lives in Toronto, remains an intensely private person. Privacy is essential, he says. I've seen a lot of writers being interpreted by their personalities - Ginsberg, Layton ...You want the book to be read, not the author. When he won the Booker Prize in 1992, he used the money to inaugurate the Gratiaen award - named after his mother - as an annual literary prize for Sri Lankan writers.

In his writing Ondaatje employs a technique of blurring fact and fiction in an imaginative collage. His longer narrative works, often based on the unorthodox lives of real people, contain fact alongside fiction. For example, in Coming Through Slaughter he relates the real and imagined life of New Orleans jazz musician Buddy Bolden; in Running in the Family, he writes a fictionalized memoir of the unconventional life of his parents and grandparents in colonial Ceylon. Some of Ondaatje's major influences come from Henri Rousseau paintings, Diego Rivera murals, Sri Lankan temple sculpture and, most of all, the music and rhythms of jazz. If I could be Fats Waller, I wouldn't be writing.

SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780679416784
ISBN 10 0679416781
Title The English Patient
Author Michael Ondaatje
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Hardback
Publisher Random House USA Inc
Year published 1992-09-29
Number of pages 307
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable