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The American No

Rupert Everett

5 Reviews

Rated 0

Fiction, Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), Short stories

Rupert Everett's debut collection of short stories - brilliant, witty, funny and tender.

'A supremely gifted writer' The Times

Seven stories of love and loss, drama and glamour, hope and rejection, from a writer at the height of his powers.

In Rupert Everett's first, glorious collection of stories, he takes us on an exhilarating journey with a cast of extraordinary characters. A blackly humorous story of a chaotic and emotional funeral in Paris. Oscar Wilde's last night in Paris, vividly evocative, unflinching and elegiac. A middle-aged Russian countess who confronts sex and age in a Cotswold teashop. The ferociously unforgiving life of an L.A. talent agency and the unexpected twist that launches a completely different kind of career. The deathbed confession of a woman who left home for 1850s India, never to return. A story of emigration, love and grief. And a beautifully evocative and touching portrayal of Proust's creative life and his childhood.

A brilliantly witty, funny and tender collection of stories that draws on the wealth of film and TV ideas Rupert Everett has created over the course of his career, The American No will delight and surprise his many fans.

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Praise for The American No

  • What makes this autobiography a (novelistic) masterpiece is the way he is acutely aware of the melancholia and pain that are the other side of hedonism's coin - Daily Telegraph, praise for Red Carpets and Other Banana Skins

  • A supremely gifted writer - Lynn Barber, The Times, praise for Vanished Years

  • Most of all he is just a very good writer indeed - Julie Burchill, Observer, praise for Vanished Years

  • In a sharp, scabrous account of his lifelong love of Oscar, the actor again proves himself a masterly writer...Everett is a deliciously gifted writer. Nothing and no one escapes his attention

  • - Rachel Cooke, Observer, praise for To the End of the World

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Rupert Everett

Rupert Everett shot to fame with the film Another Country in 1984 and has been a hugely successful actor and writer for many years. His films include The Madness of King George III; My Best Friend's Wedding; Shrek II and III; Shakespeare in Love and St Trinian's. His stage work includes playing Oscar Wilde in David Hare's The Judas Kiss (2012), for which he won the WhatsOnStage Award for Best Actor in a Play and was nominated for an OIivier Award. His first memoir, Red Carpets and Other Banana Skins, was a Sunday Times bestseller and its sequel, Vanished Years, won the Sheridan Morley Prize for Biography. His film of Oscar Wilde's last years, The Happy Prince, was released in 2018 to widespread acclaim.

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