Winner

Award History
| Award | Year | Status | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|
| James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction | 1933 | Winner |
About the Author
A. G. MacdonellScottish
Archibald Gordon Macdonell (1895–1941) was a Scottish writer, journalist, and broadcaster born in Poona, India, to a Scottish family, best known for his gently satirical novel England, Their England (1933), which won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and is celebrated as a classic of English humour depicting interwar England, particularly its famous village cricket scene. He also authored other acclaimed satirical works like The Autobiography of a Cad (1938), mystery novels under pseudonyms Neil Gordon and John Cameron, and the military history Napoleon and His Marshals (1934), while working as a journalist, BBC broadcaster, and Liberal Party candidate.
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