Friday, June 3, 2011

Philip Ziegler wins £5,000 Author's prize

The Bookseller - 03.06.11 | Lisa Campbell

Philip Ziegler has won the £5,000 Elizabeth Longford prize for his "moving" biography of Edward Heath.
Zeigler's Edward Heath—The Authorised Biography was described as a "fully rounded, compelling and ultimately moving portrait of a flawed but impressive personality" by judges of the prize—which will be presented on 14th June at The Authors' Awards, hosted by the Society of Authors at the Cavalry and Guards Club in Piccadilly, central London.

Ziegler, an 82-year-old former Foreign Service employee, has also written biographies on William IV, Lord Melbourne, Lady Diana Cooper, Lord Mountbatten, King Edward VIII, Harold Wilson, Rupert Hart-Davis and Osbert Sitwell.
Members of the judging panel included Lady Antonia Fraser, Flora Fraser, David Gilmour, Munro Price and Professor Roy Foster.

In a joint statement, they said: "The judges were particularly struck by the manner in which Philip Ziegler approached a subject which might seem initially lacking in human warmth, and even off-putting; his achievement has been to create a fully rounded, compelling and ultimately moving portrait of a flawed but impressive personality as well as of a major and often forward-looking politician.

"This was done through sensitive use of oral evidence and personal testimony and a wide and scholarly trawl through many archives, and also by a very distinguished literary style—sharp, engrossing, graceful and consummately blending irony with sympathy. It is a master-class in political biography."
The prize is sponsored by Flora Fraser and Peter Soros in memory of acclaimed biographer Elizabeth Longford and will be presented by Lady Antonia Fraser, one of the judging panel. Other prizes at the ceremony will be presented by author Joanna Trollope.

KATHERINE MANSFIELD AND CONTINENTAL EUROPE


An International Conference hosted by the Faculty of Arts and Letters,
Catholic University in Ružomberok, Slovakia
in association with the Katherine Mansfield Society

27-29 June 2012

Keynote Speakers:

Angela Smith, C. K. Stead, Maurizio Ascari,
Gerri Kimber, Claire Davison-Pégon

Having arrived in London from New Zealand in 1908 to commence her life as a writer, Katherine Mansfield travelled widely in Europe during the 1910s and early 1920s. Rarely was this for pleasure; the notion of escaping from a situation, people, and later her search for a cure for tuberculosis, predetermined much of her journeying. The resonances of this constant travelling and immersion in foreign cultures can be perceived in both her personal writing and her creative endeavours.

Possible topics for discussion might include, but are not limited to:
  
·       KM and Germany
·       KM and Russia
·       KM and Poland
·       KM and Belgium
·       KM and France
·       KM and Italy
·       KM and Switzerland
·       Notion of expatriation and displacement in KM’s stories
·       Responses to, and reception of, KM in Europe
·       KM’s influence on continental writers
·       KM as (post)colonial traveller


A highlight of the conference will be an optional trip on 30 June to nearby Krakow, the home of Poland’s most celebrated artist, Stanislaw Wyspianski, with a visit to see the internationally renowned Wyspianksi museum and the stained glass window in the Franciscan church, the inspiration for two of KM’s poems.

Please send 200 word abstracts for individual papers of 20 minutes, or 500 word proposals for panels of 3 papers to Dr Janka Kaščáková at janka.kascakova@ff.ku.sk   by 1 November 2011. Decisions will be announced by 15 December 2011.