Imagen del autor

Christina Koning

Autor de Undiscovered Country

22 Obras 97 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

También incluye: A. C. Koning (1)

Obras de Christina Koning

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Koning, Christina
Género
female
Lugar de nacimiento
Kuala Belait, Borneo
Lugares de residencia
Venezuela
Jamaica
London, England, UK
Educación
Girton College, Cambridge
University of Edinburgh
Ocupaciones
journalist
book reviewer
instructor
Organizaciones
The Times
University of Oxford
Birkbeck, University of London
Newnham College, Cambridge
Premios y honores
Encore Prize
Orange Prize Longlist
Royal Literary Fund Fellow
Biografía breve
[from Murder in Regent's Park]
Christina Koning has worked as a journalist, reviewing fiction for The Times, and has taught Creative Writing at the University of Oxford and Birkbeck, University of London. From 2013 to 2015 she was Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Newnham College, Cambridge. She won the Encore Prize in 1999 and was long-listed for the Orange Prize in the same year.

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
dgmathis | Mar 15, 2023 |
It is summer, 1935, and the academic year is drawing to a close in Cambridge. All that remains are the various colleges’’ May Balls before dons and students alike can embark upon the long summer vacation. Frederick Rowlands has accompanied his wife, who has been invited to enjoy the festivities at St Gertrude’s, the largest female college in Cambridge. Although he is blind, as a consequence of a shrapnel wound during the Great War, Fred is fiercely independent, to the extent that few people initially recognise his handicap.

During the ball, Fred briefly withdraws to the College garden, where he encounters a beautiful postgraduate physics student to whom he had been introduced earlier in the day. It is clear that she is upset, and that she had been waiting for someone who had not turned up. Assuming that this was a planned romantic encounter, Fred initially thinks nothing more of it. However, later that evening the same student is found dead in her room, with a syringe bearing traces of morphine next to her body. Called upon to help, Fred notices some inconsistencies in the description of the young woman’s room.

The prevailing opinion is that she committed suicide, although the coroner returns a verdict of death by misadventure. Rowlands remains unconvinced, however. His doubts seem to be vindicated when he returns to Cambridge a few weeks later, summoned by one of the dead student’s friends who had expressed their own doubts about her death. Rowlands find himself on the scene of another drug-induced death, and becomes utterly convinced that murder is afoot.

Ms Koning weaves a sinuous but watertight plot, and throws in a handful of very credible characters. She also offers some amusing insights into collegiate life, which are intensified by the backdrop of inequality that still persisted between the rights and reasonable expectations of male students and their female counterparts. The portrayal of St Gertrude’s College is affectionate, but not hagiographical, and there are a few gentle jokes at Girton’s expense.

This was very enjoyable, and I am eagerly looking for some of the earlier books in this series.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Eyejaybee | Aug 3, 2020 |
I enjoyed the book, with its subject of adultery and Edinburgh setting too (I'm a big fan of reading books set in places I know well). It was just a shame it was written by an author I presume to be American, with American & English main characters. Really, there was no authentic Scottish feel to it at all, the city was merely a nice stage, & that disappointed me. The only two Scottish characters were very minor & very negative, which I felt was rich seeing as all the characters were in the country to study at Edinburgh university because of its high reputation. The author made little effort to use the country as anything more than as a prop to show just how urbane her characters were. But the writing was pleasant & I did like the way that the reader was allowed to make their own judgements on the characters with a fairly neutral narrative - overall I thought it was a good book.… (más)
 
Denunciada
SadieBabie | Jun 23, 2018 |
Makes an artform of cliche.
 
Denunciada
joannajuki | otra reseña | Oct 28, 2017 |

Premios

Estadísticas

Obras
22
Miembros
97
Popularidad
#194,532
Valoración
3.0
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
29
Idiomas
1

Tablas y Gráficos