A Way in the World is a 1994 book by Nobel laureate V. S. Naipaul. Although it was marketed as a novel in America, A Way in the World is arguably something different.
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Naipaul reportedly agreed to call A Way in the World a novel at the request of his publisher, having himself suggested "sequence" as a sub-title:[1] the word sequence has been adopted by some reviewers.[2] Despite his achievements as a novelist, in later life Naipaul has described the novel as an outmoded form.[3]
A Way in the World is more fictional than the Naipaul's earlier historical work The Loss of El Dorado (1969), which deals with some of the same material, for example the lives of Sir Walter Raleigh and Francisco de Miranda. Naipaul also includes autobiographical material, partly fictionalised, which was not in the first book.
The book was short-listed for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.
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