J.G.Farrell (1935–1979) was born with a caul, long
considered a sign of good fortune. Academically and athletically
gifted, Farrell grew up in England and Ireland. In 1956, during his
first term at Oxford, he suffered what seemed a minor injury on the
rugby pitch. Within days, however, he was diagnosed with polio,
which nearly killed him and left him permanently weakened.
Farrell’s early novels, which include The Lung and A
Girl in the Head,have been overshadowed by his Empire
Trilogy—Troubles, the Booker Prize–winning Siege of
Krishnapur, and The Singapore Grip (all three are
published by NYRB Classics). In early 1979, Farrell
bought a farmhouse in Bantry Bay on the Irish coast. “I’ve been
trying to write,” he admitted, “but there are so many competing
interests—the prime one at the moment is fishing off the rocks… .
Then a colony of bees has come to live above my back door and I’m
thinking of turning them into my feudal retainers.” On August 11,
Farrell was hit by a wave while fishing and was washed out to sea.
His body was found a month later. A biography
of J.G. Farrell, J.G. Farrell: The Making of a Writer by
Lavinia Greacen, was published by Bloomsbury in 1999.
Derek Mahon was born in Belfast in 1941, studied at Trinity
College, Dublin, and the Sorbonne, and has held journalistic and
academic appointments in London and New York. He has received
numerous awards, including the Irish Times/Aer Lingus Poetry
Prize, the Irish Academy of Letters Award, the Scott Moncrieff and
Aristeion translation prizes, and Lannan and Guggenheim
fellowships. His Collected Poems were published in 1999
and Harbour Lights, a volume of new poetry, was published in
2006.
"A brilliant, complex, richly absurd and melancholy monument to the
follies and splendours of Empire."
— Hilary Spurling
"[This] vivid, multi-dimensional portrait of Singapore…is a
superbly constructed book, enjoyable on many different levels."
— The Sunday Times
"In Singapore…Farrell makes a heroic and memorable attempt to
portray and understand not only the Japanese, but also the lives of
the millions of poor, oppressed, displaced and dying whose
destruction came about through no fault of their own, who were
swept helplessly away by the tides of commercial interest and
war."
— Margaret Drabble
"The author of the Booker Prize-winning The Siege of Krishnapur
sets this brilliant work in Singapore in 1939, as an old English
firm tries to cash in on the impending world war. A complex, often
funny meditation on empire and other matters."
— Martin Levin, The Globe and Mail"No writer has swallowed all of
Singapore, from its stately colonial bungalows to its once
opium-infested slums, with the verve and wit of the late J.G.
Farrell, whose 1978 saga The Singapore Grip remains the great
Singapore novel...Farrell's pungent aroma still fleetingly hovers
over today's city...With his gentle wit Farrell captures the soul
of Singapore: a polyglot Asian port, still partly under the sleepy
sway of its British colonial past, and still lurching toward an
uncertain future with a furious, irresistible energy."
—Time Magazine
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