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My Foggy Life is a general fiction, but mostly based on the real facts, situations, hopes and tribulations, and virtuous and evil human nature and behaviours which have been experienced by the author and a few other persons whom the writer has known over the years. In fact these situations and experiences are universal and the readers will perhaps relate to many of the facts portrayed in the book. The book also touches on philology, religion, multi-culture, conflicts between the first and second generations of the immigrants, music, tourism and politics.

Produktbeschreibung
My Foggy Life is a general fiction, but mostly based on the real facts, situations, hopes and tribulations, and virtuous and evil human nature and behaviours which have been experienced by the author and a few other persons whom the writer has known over the years. In fact these situations and experiences are universal and the readers will perhaps relate to many of the facts portrayed in the book. The book also touches on philology, religion, multi-culture, conflicts between the first and second generations of the immigrants, music, tourism and politics.
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Autorenporträt
Asaduzzaman Malik has been living in London since 1963 with a break of one year. He was born in Bangladesh and since his childhood his hobby is writing poems and articles in both Bengali and English. During his student life at the college many of his English poems were published in a reputed Weekly. In recognition of his Bengali poems he was awarded the title of " Kabya-Bharati" by "Gaurha-Bongo Shahitya Parishad", a literary organisation. In 1957 he passed his M.A. in International Relations from Dhaka University, Bangladesh. In 1959 he joined a secondary school in Dhaka as a Senior Teacher. In 1963 he came to London and completed the journalism course of the London School Journalism while he was teaching in Tower Hamlets in London. In 1967 he went back to Dhaka and for a brief time joined Sunday Holiday, an English Weekly. Many of his articles were published in the Daily Morning News and other papers through the then Pakistan Features Syndicate. In 1968 he returned to London and for about 33 years he taught various subjects till he retired in 2001. He was formally Deputy Head of Year at Haggerston School in Hackney, London and formerly Head of ESOL Department at Hornsey School For Girls, Hornsey, London.