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How to evaluate the three outstanding immigrants in English literature?

Very talented.

1954165438+1October 8th, kazuo ishiguro was born in Nagasaki. 1960 moved to Britain with his family, graduated from Kent University and the University of East Anglia, and 1982 obtained British citizenship. From 65438 to 0983, he began to publish novels, including Mountain Colors, Ukiyo-e Painters, and The Long Day Will Come to an End.

He won many awards, such as 1989 Booker Prize, Knights of the British Empire and French art and literature. , together with Rudy and Naipaul, are called the three outstanding immigrants in English literature.

Today, Nobel Prize in Literature's popular candidates include Japanese writer Haruki Murakami, Kenyan writer ngugi Wa Tian Ge, Syrian poet adonis, Israeli writer amos oz, Alba novelist Ismail Cadal, Canadian writer Margaret Atwood and China writer Yan Lianke, who is also predicted as a popular candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature by Ladbrokes.

representative works

Florence goddess

Admiration is also a kind of travel, and it is full of danger.

In my trip to India, the ancient city of Sigri is just a name with complicated syllables, and it is a "stop by" after visiting the famous Taj Mahal and Agra Fort. It was not until I read Rushdie's Goddess of Florence that I saw his description of the "City of Victory". Its name is spinning on the tip of my tongue, and the tortuous syllables are so familiar: Fatah al-Sigri.

The writer is the best magician, and his brushwork can recall all the good things in the past. In Rushdie's works, Sigri is a beautiful dream: the towering red sandstone palace is like a mirage made of red smoke, and the air is filled with mysterious fragrance; The water in the fountain drips, the soft music floats with the wind as the lover whispers, and someone whispers poetry in the emperor's ear; The floor of the yard is painted with chessboards, and the soft-waisted female slaves move under the chessboard; A room with thick curtains makes time lazy. ...

Rushdie whispered in my ear through the imaginary queen Akbar the Great: "No matter which city travelers come from, they are walking in our dreams." The emperor replied, "We are the dreams of travelers, and travelers are also our dreams. Think about it. Can we wake up in other people's dreams and change our dreams? Do we have the courage to invite others to our dreams? "