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| x Green Education International Consultant |
Green Education International Consultant is an educational consultancy farm dealing with many chinese universities. This consultancy farm also dealing with Guilin University of Technology. This consultant recruit student from all over the world to...
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| x Guilin University of Technology |
Guilin University of Technology is situated in the city Guilin in Guangxi, China.
-Chinese Language Training Courses
BA. Accounting
BA. Administrative Management
BA. Advertising
BA. Animation
BA. Art Design
BA. Business Management
BA. E-Commerce
BA....
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| x Guilin |
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Guilin (Chinese: 桂林; pinyin: Guìlín) is a prefecture-level city in China, situated in the northeast of the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region on the west bank of the Li River. Its name means "forest of Sweet Osmanthus", owing to the large number of...
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| x Li Zongren |
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Li Zongren or Li Tsung-jen (Chinese: 李宗仁; pinyin: Lǐ Zōngrén; Wade-Giles: Li Tsung-jen; POJ: Lí Chong-jîn) (13 August 1890 - 30 January 1969), courtesy name Delin (德鄰), was prominent Guangxi warlord and Kuomintang (KMT) military commander during the...
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| x Mo Huilan |
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Mo Huilan (simplified Chinese: 莫慧兰; traditional Chinese: 莫慧蘭; pinyin: Mò Huìlán; born 1979 in Guilin, Guangxi) is a Chinese gymnast who competed at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. She was one of China's most successful gymnasts in the 1990s. She...
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| x Linda Lin Dai |
Linda Lin Dai (Chinese: 林黛 26 December 1934–17 July 1964) was a Chinese actress of Hong Kong films made in Mandarin during 1950s–60s. She was a star actress in the Shaw Brothers Studio stable.
Born Cheng Yueru (程月如) in Guilin, Lin Dai was awarded...
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| x Guangxi |
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This article is about a region of China. For the sociological concept, see Guānxi.
Guangxi (or Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region; simplified Chinese: 广西壮族自治区; traditional Chinese: 廣西壯族自治區; pinyin: Guǎngxī Zhuàngzú Zìzhìqū) is a Zhuang autonomous...
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| x China |
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China (traditional Chinese: 中國; simplified Chinese: 中国; Hanyu Pinyin: Zhōngguó (help·info); Tongyong Pinyin: Jhongguó; Wade-Giles (Mandarin): Chung¹kuo²) is a cultural region, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or...
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| x Yangshuo |
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Yangshuo County (simplified Chinese: 阳朔县; traditional Chinese: 陽朔縣; pinyin: Yángshuò Xiàn) is a county in Guilin, Guangxi Province, China. Its seat is located in Yangshuo Town. Surrounded by karst peaks and bordered on one side by the Li River (漓江)...
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| x Chinese Standard Time |
China standard time or Beijing time is the time zone observed in the People's Republic of China (PRC) mainland. It is eight hours ahead of UTC (UTC+8).
Certain regions of eastern Asia, including Greater China, also observe time zones which have the...
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| x The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II |
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The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II is a bestselling 1997 non-fiction book written by Iris Chang about the 1937–1938 Nanking Massacre, the massacre and atrocities committed by the Imperial Japanese Army after it captured...
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| x Seven Years in Tibet |
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Seven Years in Tibet is an autobiographical travel book written by Austrian mountaineer Heinrich Harrer based on his real life experiences in Tibet between 1944 and 1951 during the Second World War and the interim period before the Communist Chinese...
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| x Journey to the West |
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Journey to the West (simplified Chinese: 西游记; traditional Chinese: 西遊記; pinyin: Xī Yóu Jì; Wade-Giles: Hsi-yu chi) is one of the Four Great Classical Novels of Chinese literature. Originally published anonymously in the 1590s during the Ming Dynasty...
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| x Empire of the Sun |
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Empire of the Sun is a 1984 novel by J. G. Ballard which was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Like Ballard's earlier short story, "The Dead Time" (published in the anthology Myths of the Near Future), it is essentially fiction but draws...
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| x Tai-Pan: A Novel of Hong Kong |
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Tai-Pan is a novel written by James Clavell about European and American traders who move into Hong Kong in 1841 following the end of the first Opium War. It is the second book in Clavell's "Asian Saga".
The novel begins following the British victory...
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| x The Good Earth |
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The Good Earth is a novel by Pearl S. Buck published in 1931 and awarded the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel in 1932. It was an influential factor in Buck winning the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1938. It is the first book in a trilogy that includes...
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| x Bridge of Birds |
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Bridge of Birds is a fantasy novel by Barry Hughart, first published in 1984. It is the first of three novels in the The Chronicles of Master Li and Number Ten Ox series. The original draft of Bridge of Birds is included in a special slipcased...
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| x Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio |
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Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio or Liaozhai Zhiyi (also Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio or Strange Tales of Liaozhai, simplified Chinese: 聊斋志异; traditional Chinese: 聊齋誌異; pinyin: Liáozhāi zhìyì) is a collection of nearly five hundred...
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| x Noble House: The Epic Novel of Modern Hong Kong |
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Noble House is a novel by James Clavell, published in 1981 and set in Hong Kong in 1963. It is part of Clavell's Asian Saga.
It is a massive book, well over 1000 pages, with dozens of characters and numerous intermingling plot lines. In 1988, it was...
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| x The Woman Warrior |
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The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts is a memoir by Maxine Hong Kingston, published by Vintage Books in 1975. Although there are many scholarly debates surrounding the official genre classification of the book, it can best be...
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| x Wild Swans |
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Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China is an autobiographical family history by Chinese writer Jung Chang. First published in 1991, Wild Swans contains a biography of the three female generations of Chang's family: her grandmother, her mother and...
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| x Moment in Peking |
Moment in Peking (simplified Chinese: 京华烟云; traditional Chinese: 京華煙雲; pinyin: jīng huá yān yún) (also translated as simplified Chinese: 瞬息京华; traditional Chinese: 瞬息京華; pinyin: shūn xī jīng huá) is a historical novel originally written in English...
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| x Lost in Translation |
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Lost in Translation is the title of a novel written by Nicole Mones and was published by Bantam Dell in 1999, it is the story of an American woman trying to lose her past by living as a translator in China.
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| x Katherine |
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Katherine (ISBN 1-57322-005-1) is the first novel by Anchee Min. It was published by Riverside Books in 1995.
Six years after the death of Mao, the People's Republic of China opens its doors to learn how to integrate into the larger world. The title...
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| x States and Social Revolutions |
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States and Social Revolutions: A Comparative Analysis of France, Russia and China is a 1979 book by political scientist and sociologist Theda Skocpol, published by Cambridge University Press and explaining the causes of revolutions through the...
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| x Becoming Madame Mao |
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Becoming Madame Mao (2001, Mariner Books, ISBN 0-618-12700-3) is a historical novel by Anchee Min detailing the life of Jiang Qing. She became Madame Mao after her marriage to Mao Zedong. In this story Min tries to cast a sympathetic light on one of...
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| x Tribulations of a Chinaman in China |
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Tribulations of a Chinaman in China (French: Les Tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine) is an adventure novel by Jules Verne, first published in 1879. The story is about a rich Chinese man, Kin-Fo, who is bored with life, and after some business...
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| x China Attacks |
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China Attacks is a techno-thriller co-authored by Chuck DeVore and Steven W. Mosher. Written in 1999, the novel was self-published in English in 2000 through Infinity Publishing. A Chinese translation was published in 2001.
China Attacks explores...
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| x When We Were Orphans |
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When We Were Orphans is a novel by the British-Japanese author Kazuo Ishiguro, published 2000 (ISBN 0-375-72440-0).
The novel is about a British man named Christopher Banks who used to live in the Shanghai of colonial China in the early 1900s, but...
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| x Flashman and the Dragon |
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Flashman and the Dragon is a 1985 novel by George MacDonald Fraser. It is the eighth of the Flashman novels.
Presented within the frame of the supposedly discovered historical Flashman Papers, this book describes the bully Flashman from Tom Brown's...
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| x Missee Lee |
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Missee Lee is the tenth book of Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons series of children's books, published in 1941. This is considered one of the metafictional books of the series. It is set in 1930s China. The Swallows and Amazons are on a round...
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| x Chinese Cinderella |
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Chinese Cinderella is a novel written by author Adeline Yen Mah which describes her experiences growing up in China during the Second World War. It was published in 1999 and is a revised version of part of her autobiography, Falling Leaves.
Chinese...
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| x Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze |
Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze is a book by Elizabeth Foreman Lewis that won the Newbery Medal for excellence in American children's literature in 1932. The story revolves around Fu Yuin-fah, the son of a widow from the countryside of western China,...
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| x Safely Home |
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Safely Home is a Christian novel by Randy Alcorn. It takes place in present-day China, and follows the story of two Harvard roommates, one American and one Chinese, who reunite decades after they graduate. The novel won the Gold Medallion Book Award...
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| x Peony |
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Peony is a novel by Pearl S. Buck first published in 1948. It is a story of China's Kaifeng Jews.
Peony is set in the 1850s in the city of Kaifeng, in the province of Henan, which was historically a center for Jews. The novel follows Peony, a...
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| x Imperial Woman |
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Imperial Woman is a novel by Pearl S. Buck first published in 1956.
Imperial Woman is a fictionalized biography of Ci-xi (Tz'u Hsi in Wade-Giles), who was a concubine of the Xianfeng Emperor and on his death became the de facto head of the Qing...
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| x Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism |
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Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of "Brainwashing" in China is a psychology non-fiction book on brainwashing and mind control, by Robert Jay Lifton, M.D.. The book was published in multiple editions, in 1956 (Hardcover), 1961,...
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| x The Shark Mutiny |
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The Shark Mutiny is a novel written by Patrick Robinson and was published in 2001. Four years later the second edition was published with a new cover picture painted by Larry Rostant. The book is a sequel to USS Seawolf.
The plot of "Shark Mutiny"...
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| x The Painted Veil |
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The Painted Veil is a 1925 novel by W. Somerset Maugham. The title is taken from Percy Bysshe Shelley's sonnet which begins "Lift not the painted veil which those who live / Call Life".
Biographer Richard Cordell notes that the book was influenced...
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| x The Secrets of Jin-Shei |
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The Secrets of Jin-Shei is a novel written by Alma A. Hromic (as Alma Alexander), published by HarperCollins in May 2004 in the U.S., and also published in several other countries in a total of eleven languages.
A tale of bonding sisterhood, this...
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| x In the Pond |
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In the Pond is a 2000 novel by Ha Jin, who has also written Under the Red Flag, Ocean of Winds, and Waiting. He has been praised for his works relating to Chinese life and culture.
The novel centers around the character Shao Bin, a Chinese man...
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| x Journey to a War |
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Journey to a War is a travel book in prose and verse by W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood, published in 1939.
The book is in three parts: a series of poems by Auden describing his and Isherwood's journey to China in 1938 ; a "Travel-Diary" by...
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| x Mei Li |
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Mei Li is a book by Thomas Handforth. Released by Doubleday, it was the recipient of the Caldecott Medal for illustration in 1939.
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| x Sons |
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Sons is the sequel to the novel The Good Earth, and the second book in the The House of Earth trilogy by renowned author Pearl S. Buck. It was first published in 1932.
The story tackles the issue of Wang Lung's sons and how they handle their father...
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| x In Xanadu: A Quest |
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In Xanadu is a 1989 travel book by William Dalrymple.
Unlike typical travel books, In Xanadu traces the path taken by Marco Polo from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem to the site of Shangdu, famed as Xanadu in English literature, in...
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| x Music on the Bamboo Radio |
Music on the Bamboo Radio is a novel written by Martin Booth that was first published in 1997. The story revolves around Nicholas Holford, the main character and minor relations can be made to Martin Booth's life during the Second World War.
The...
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| x Empress Orchid |
Empress Orchid (2004) is a novel by Anchee Min which was first published in Great Britain in 2004. It is written in first person and is a sympathetic account of the life of Empress Dowager Cixi - from her humble beginnings to her rise as the Empress...
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| x The Adventures of Mao on the Long March |
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The Adventures of Mao on the Long March is Frederic Tuten's first published novel. The novel is a fictionalized account of Chairman Mao's rise to power, and is highly experimental in nature, including extensive use of parody and collage.
The novel...
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| x Sagittarius Rising | ||
| x The River at the Center of the World |
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The River At The Center Of The World : A Journey Up the Yangtze, and Back in Chinese Time (ISBN 0-312-42337-3) is a book by Simon Winchester. It details his travels up the Yangtze river in China and was first published in 1996.
Viewing an ancient...
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| x Chinese Cinderella and the Secret Dragon Society |
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Chinese Cinderella and the Secret Dragon Society is a historical novel by Adeline Yen Mah, published in 2005. It is the fictional sequel to her autobiography for children, Chinese Cinderella.
The main character is a twelve year old girl called CC...
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| x Never Enough |
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The 2007 book Never Enough was a true-crime tale by Joe McGinniss, the author of Fatal Vision, Blind Faith and others in this genre.
McGinniss tells the story of Robert Kissel, an investment banker who lived in Hong Kong, where he worked as a first...
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| x Empress |
Empress (French: Impératrice) is a French biographical novel by Shan Sa, a French author who was born in Beijing. It is based on the life of Empress Wu Zetian.
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| x The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci | ||
| x The Gate of Heavenly Peace | ||
| x Challenging the Mandate of Heaven | ||
| x Flower Net |
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Flower Net (1997) by Lisa See is the first of the Red Princess mysteries. The other two novels in the series are The Interior (1999) and Dragon Bones (2003). Flower Net explores the state of US-China relations in the early months of 1997, especially...
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| x Snow Flower and the Secret Fan |
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Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, a novel by Lisa See (2005), is set in China in the 1800s. In her introduction to the novel, See writes that Lily, the narrator, was born in 1823 -- "the third year of Emperor Daoguangs reign". The novel begins in 1903...
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| x Dragon Bones |
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Dragon Bones by Lisa See (2003) is the third of the Red Princess mysteries, preceded by Flower Net and The Interior. Once again the protagonists Inspector Liu Hulan and Attorney David Stark return -- but this time as husband and wife.
At the start...
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| x The Hundred Secret Senses |
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The Hundred Secret Senses is a 1995 novel by Amy Tan, focusing on the relationship between Chinese-born Kwan and her younger, Chinese American sister Olivia, who serves as the book's primary narrator. It was shortlisted for the 1996 Orange Prize for...
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