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Authors Last A Long Time, But....

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German children's book author Ellis Kaut is dead at 94:

 

http://www.deadfamous.info/ellis-kaut-german-author-died-at-94

 

Her most famous creation was the Pumuckl, a red-haired gnome, later turned into a tv series that was almost required watching for every german child of a certain age.

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German children's book author Ellis Kaut is dead at 94:

 

http://www.deadfamous.info/ellis-kaut-german-author-died-at-94

 

Her most famous creation was the Pumuckl, a red-haired gnome, later turned into a tv series that was almost required watching for every german child of a certain age.

 

Dammit! I had her on my next year's list :rant:

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More from Jenny Diski about her predicament:

 

For how long? This uncertainty is difficult. Perhaps a year, the younger, more relaxed Doctor Fibes told me. But then that caution: of course we can’t be sure. I might get an infection; just a minor thing without a properly functioning immune system could escalate into pneumonia. More deadly. Of course they can’t, they’re working with statistics taken from studies made years and worlds apart. We’re back to square one. Everyone is different, we can’t make that kind of judgment. The answer is – with the new drugs, if they work on me – ‘perhaps a year’. But then again

 

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Authors last a long time, but probably not Péter Esterházy (65), who has recently hinted at his battle with pancreatic cancer. DDP-qualifying obit is not guaranteed, but Deathrace points are almost certain.

 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/reuters/article-3257851/Hungarian-author-Peter-Esterhazy-pancreatic-cancer--magazine.html

 

 

Indeed, feel free to pick pancreatic cases and put points on the board.

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German interview with Henning Mankell:

 

http://www.stern.de/kultur/buecher/henning-mankell-ueber-den-krebs---ich-werde-an-dieser-krankheit-sterben--6440798.html

 

He says he knows he'll die of cancer, but it's unclear when. He has no pain currently, and the treatment worked in so far as that he has regained some strength. His new book "Quicksand" is also a bit of an autobiography.

Now we know, dies aged 67.

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German interview with Henning Mankell:

 

http://www.stern.de/kultur/buecher/henning-mankell-ueber-den-krebs---ich-werde-an-dieser-krankheit-sterben--6440798.html

 

He says he knows he'll die of cancer, but it's unclear when. He has no pain currently, and the treatment worked in so far as that he has regained some strength. His new book "Quicksand" is also a bit of an autobiography.

Now we know, dies aged 67.

 

Well, well.... I removed him from my preliminary 2016 team after that interview exactly because of it. He seemed to me to be in somewhat stable condition and I only want "sure hits" (yeah i know, almost everyone does). There's been lots of talk of improvements in cancer medication lately and he seemed to be a beneficiary (like Clive James, for example).

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fuck me runnin......short listed him back in Dec, he seemed more than healthy enough to survive a year.

SC

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I doubt she'd get an obituary here, but acclaimed Japanese novelist Jakucho Setouchi, 93, is suffering from cancer. She has been a Buddhist nun since 1973 and is probably as well known in Japan for her campaigns on social issues as she is for her books.

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I doubt she'd get an obituary here, but acclaimed Japanese novelist Jakucho Setouchi, 93, is suffering from cancer. She has been a Buddhist nun since 1973 and is probably as well known in Japan for her campaigns on social issues as she is for her books.

 

She has been featured in the New York Times. It's possible she get's an AP write up in the Us which leads to a copy and paste obit from Daily Mail.

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Booker Prize Winners updated for 2014 & 2015 Winners

V S Naipaul (1932)
John Berger (1926)
David Storey (1933)
Salman Rushdie (1947)
Thomas Keneally (1935)
J M Coetzee (1940)
Anita Brookner (1928)
Keri Hume (1947)
Penelope Lively (1933)
Peter Carey (1943)
Kazuo Ishiguro (1954)
A S Byatt (1936)
Ben Okri (1959)
Michael Ondaatje (1943)
Roddy Doyle (1958)
James Kelman (1946)
Pat Barker (1943)
Graham Swift (1949)
Arundhati Roy (1961)
Ian McEwan (1948)
Margaret Atwood (1939)
Yann Martel (1963)
DBC Pierre (1961)
Alan Hollinghurst (1954)
John Banville (1945)
Kiran Desai (1971)
Anne Enright (1962)
Aravind Adiga (1974)
Hilary Mantel (1952)
Howard Jacobson (1942)
Julian Barnes (1946)
Eleanor Catton (1985)

Richard Flanagan (1961)

Marlon James (1970)

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http://www.bbc.co.uk/derby/content/articles/2005/01/31/derby_dead_pool_2005_feature.shtml

 

Most of the contestants enter the game anonymously and updates are distributed via email.

 

Rude Kid said: "One of our current competitors is a well-known political figure who apparently entered after someone made him aware that he'd been picked last year.

 

"He looked at the site, saw the funny side and decided to join in. However, he tells us he's in good health and has no plans to pop off at any time in the near future!"

 

 

I wonder who it was. If it was Heath, he was in for a shock.

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Diana Athill, who turns 98 next week, being interviewed for her 'last' book:

 

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/nov/21/diana-athill-interview-memoir-alive-alive-oh

 

Apart from a cancerous tumour on her kidney that doesn't grow, she doesn't give the impression that she might die soon.

 

Edit: Ha! Sorry, MPFC...

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Diana Athill, who turns 98 next week, being interviewed for her 'last' book:

 

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/nov/21/diana-athill-interview-memoir-alive-alive-oh

 

Apart from a cancerous tumour on her kidney that doesn't grow, she doesn't give the impression that she might die soon.

 

Edit: Ha! Sorry, MPFC...

 

 

No problem, two publications for two different bespoke audiences, she'd doubtless approve.

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Diana Athill, who turns 98 next week, being interviewed for her 'last' book:

 

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/nov/21/diana-athill-interview-memoir-alive-alive-oh

 

Apart from a cancerous tumour on her kidney that doesn't grow, she doesn't give the impression that she might die soon.

 

Edit: Ha! Sorry, MPFC...

 

 

No problem, two publications for two different bespoke audiences, she'd doubtless approve.

 

Indeed, her amorous adventures make her an interesting Death List pick.

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Diana Athill, who turns 98 next week, being interviewed for her 'last' book:

 

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/nov/21/diana-athill-interview-memoir-alive-alive-oh

 

Apart from a cancerous tumour on her kidney that doesn't grow, she doesn't give the impression that she might die soon.

 

Edit: Ha! Sorry, MPFC...

 

 

No problem, two publications for two different bespoke audiences, she'd doubtless approve.

 

Indeed, her amorous adventures make her an interesting Death List pick.

 

 

 

There's a curious lack of fear and strong objectivity about her that leads me to think she wouldn't be too offended to see us talking about her scoring chances.

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Military author and retired diplomat Robert F Dorr is suffering from incurable brain cancer.

 

Impending death not in question....but is he obitable?

 

http://robertfdorr.blogspot.co.uk/2015/11/news-from-bob.html?m=1

 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_F._Dorr

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Military author and retired diplomat Robert F Dorr is suffering from incurable brain cancer.

Impending death not in question....but is he obitable?

http://robertfdorr.blogspot.co.uk/2015/11/news-from-bob.html?m=1

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_F._Dorr

Who cares? He's 'deadable'. You folks really have issues putting carts in front of horses. I'll take 12 deaths and 4 of them don't obit vs your 6 folks that guarantee obits. You know who won't obit? LIVING PEOPLE!

SC

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Military author and retired diplomat Robert F Dorr is suffering from incurable brain cancer.

Impending death not in question....but is he obitable?

http://robertfdorr.blogspot.co.uk/2015/11/news-from-bob.html?m=1

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_F._Dorr

Who cares? He's 'deadable'. You folks really have issues putting carts in front of horses. I'll take 12 deaths and 4 of them don't obit vs your 6 folks that guarantee obits. You know who won't obit? LIVING PEOPLE!

SC

 

 

I look forward to doing battle with you in the DDP next year then.

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