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| Offshore | |
|---|---|
First edition cover |
|
| Author(s) | Penelope Fitzgerald |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Genre(s) | Fiction |
| Publisher | HarperCollins |
| Publication date | 1979 |
| Pages | 141 pages |
| ISBN | 0-395-47804-9 |
| OCLC Number | 38043106 |
| Preceded by | The Bookshop |
| Followed by | Human Voices |
Offshore (1979) is a novel by Penelope Fitzgerald. It won the Booker Prize for that year. It recalls her time spent on boats in Battersea by the Thames. The novel centralizes around the idea of liminality, expanding upon it to include the notion: 'liminal people,' people who do not belong to the land or the sea, but somewhere in-between. The epigraph, "che mena il vento, e che batte la pioggia, e che s'incontran con si aspre lingue" (whom the wind drives, or whom the rain beats, or those who clash with such bitter tongues) comes from Canto XI of Dante's Inferno.
Maurice
Grace
Dreadnought
Rochester
| Awards | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by The Sea, the Sea |
Man Booker Prize recipient 1979 |
Succeeded by Rites of Passage |
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