Author | Jeffrey Moore |
---|---|
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Publisher | Thistledown Press |
Publication date | 29 Nov 1999 |
Media type | |
Pages | 345 |
Awards | Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book (2000) |
ISBN | 1-895449-92-8 |
Prisoner in a Red-Rose Chain (also published as Red-Rose Chain [1]) is the first novel by Canadian author Jeffrey Moore [2] it won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book in 2000, and has been translated into a dozen different languages.
The novel chronicles the peregrinations of its love-obsessed picaresque hero, Jeremy Davenant, as he moves from York to Toronto to Montreal’s “ Plateau district” and then back to York in pursuit of a destiny, that he believes is determined by a page ripped from an encyclopedia, which includes a university career based on a bogus PhD with a plagiarized thesis on the apocryphal Shakespeare play, A Yorkshire Tragedy, and the intermittently requited love of his “dark lady,” a Roma named Milena.
Author | Jeffrey Moore |
---|---|
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Publisher | Thistledown Press |
Publication date | 29 Nov 1999 |
Media type | |
Pages | 345 |
Awards | Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book (2000) |
ISBN | 1-895449-92-8 |
Prisoner in a Red-Rose Chain (also published as Red-Rose Chain [1]) is the first novel by Canadian author Jeffrey Moore [2] it won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book in 2000, and has been translated into a dozen different languages.
The novel chronicles the peregrinations of its love-obsessed picaresque hero, Jeremy Davenant, as he moves from York to Toronto to Montreal’s “ Plateau district” and then back to York in pursuit of a destiny, that he believes is determined by a page ripped from an encyclopedia, which includes a university career based on a bogus PhD with a plagiarized thesis on the apocryphal Shakespeare play, A Yorkshire Tragedy, and the intermittently requited love of his “dark lady,” a Roma named Milena.