A memoir called Lilla's Feast, British writer Frances Osborne's story of her great-grandmother's extraordinary life in China, London, Calcutta and, ultimately, in a Japanese internment camp in China in WWII, made strong sales on both sides of the Atlantic by agents from Janklow & Nesbit. In London, Claire Patterson handled a strongly contested auction, based on Osborne's riveting 80-page proposal, that ended in a win for Jane Lawson at Transworld. Meanwhile, Mouria in Holland preempted for a handsome sum. It was Eric Simonoff in New York who made the American sale, in which Ballantine's Elisabeth Dyssegarde beat out bidders from Scribner and FSG/North Point. The book's title refers to the fact that Lilla kept her mind alive in the prison camp by composing an imaginary cookbook.
China Memoir Goes Transatlantic
Feb 21, 2003
A version of this article appeared in the 02/24/2003 issue of Publishers Weekly under the headline: