From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Landlocked
First edition
Author Doris Lessing
LanguageEnglish
Series Children of Violence
Genre Novel
Published 1965
Publisher MacGibbon & Kee
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint
Preceded by A Ripple from the Storm 
Followed by The Four-Gated City 

Landlocked (1965) is the fourth novel in British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing five volume, semi-autobiographical, series, Children of Violence. The first volume is Martha Quest (1952), and the others are, A Proper Marriage (1954), A Ripple from the Storm (1958), and The Four-Gated City (1969). The Children of Violence series, follows the life of protagonist Martha Quest "from girlhood to middle age". [1]

This is the last of the series that is set in southern Africa: "The time is the last few months of a war that had not only ruined Europe but had flooded a message of equality even into this backwater. Some of the white people have already sensed the imminence of change: they could never again unthinkingly hold down this corner of Africa for themselves and their heirs". [2]

References


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Landlocked
First edition
Author Doris Lessing
LanguageEnglish
Series Children of Violence
Genre Novel
Published 1965
Publisher MacGibbon & Kee
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint
Preceded by A Ripple from the Storm 
Followed by The Four-Gated City 

Landlocked (1965) is the fourth novel in British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing five volume, semi-autobiographical, series, Children of Violence. The first volume is Martha Quest (1952), and the others are, A Proper Marriage (1954), A Ripple from the Storm (1958), and The Four-Gated City (1969). The Children of Violence series, follows the life of protagonist Martha Quest "from girlhood to middle age". [1]

This is the last of the series that is set in southern Africa: "The time is the last few months of a war that had not only ruined Europe but had flooded a message of equality even into this backwater. Some of the white people have already sensed the imminence of change: they could never again unthinkingly hold down this corner of Africa for themselves and their heirs". [2]

References



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