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Richard Lloyd Parry
Richard Lloyd Parry is a British author and award-winning foreign correspondent. He was born in northern England in 1969, and educated at Oxford University. Since 1995 has lived in Tokyo, where he is the Asia Editor of 'The Times' of London. He has reported from twenty-seven countries, including... show more

Richard Lloyd Parry is a British author and award-winning foreign correspondent. He was born in northern England in 1969, and educated at Oxford University. Since 1995 has lived in Tokyo, where he is the Asia Editor of 'The Times' of London. He has reported from twenty-seven countries, including Afghanistan, Iraq, Kosovo and Macedonia. In recent years, he has covered the war in Iraq, the crisis in North Korea, political turmoil in Thailand and Burma, and the tsunami and nuclear disasters in Japan. In 2005, he was named Foreign Correspondent of the Year in the UK's What The Papers Say Awards.He has also contributed to the London Review of Books, Granta and the New York Times Magazine. His books include In the Time of Madness (Grove 2005), an account of the violence in Indonesia in the late 1990s. People Who Eat Darkness: The Fate of Lucie Blackman, published in February 2011, was longlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction.
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Rachel Blogs
Rachel Blogs rated it 10 years ago
This book DRAGS. It's super interesting at times, but for a 300 page book it feels like it's 800 pages. It was interesting but not interesting enough to get through.
CharlotteBuriedinBooks
CharlotteBuriedinBooks rated it 12 years ago
This was a very difficult book to read. I start it nearly a year ago and had to keep putting it down. I remember Lucie's disappearance very clearly, the pretty blond girl who vanished and was then found such a long time later, buried in a cave, in pieces. I remember her father and his attitude, h...
ageraets
ageraets rated it 12 years ago
Densely written, thoroughly researched, very objective and (unfortunately) somewhat dull, Richard Lloyd Parry's book on the disappearance of Lucie Blackman is worth reading if the reader is willing to be patient. This reader, sadly, was not able to be as patient as she should have been. The facts ar...
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