[/QUOTE][And, because this is the sort of forum it is, here's a few writers that sum up the essence of englishness (in it's many guises): DH Lawrence, Thomas Hardy, Rudyard Kipling (I know where he was born, but still...), Charles Dickens, Jane Austin & John Fowles. (There are many others, but I tried to keep to well known names and selected on the grounds of their 'englishness quotient' before all else.)
These are good suggestions! One thing about Fowles’ "The Collector" that is strikingly English is the brilliant way he deals with the class difference between Miranda and Clegg – class being a very important component of English society.
I was trying to think of a comparable example in very recent English fiction but could only think of Zadie Smith’s "White Teeth" – I think that also recognizes the subtleties of class differences, but there are probably other examples.


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Well I voted now and I would have maintained my protest to not vote if I had caught my original post. 