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Actor Nigel Le Vaillant stars as the title character, Dr. Paul Dangerfield, on the British television medical drama series, ‘Dangerfield.’
Serving the needs of all aspects of their community can often be a struggle for people. That’s certainly the case for the title protagonist of the British television series, ‘Dangerfield.’ The medical drama’s eponymous character, Paul Dangerfield, who was played by Nigel Le Vaillant, emphasizes his constant struggle to manage the conflicting demands of his work as a small town doctor and police surgeon. His work is complicated even more by his person life, as he has to continuously contend with the death of his wife from a few years earlier, and raising their children, Alison and Marty, on his own.
The Ultimate Summer Escape: Historical Fiction
New novels by turns salty, sweeping and sweet will transport you to 1930s Italy, 19th-century England and San Francisco a hundred years ago.
Credit.Ryan Gillett
May 27, 2021, 9:55 a.m. ET
If you think of historical fiction as a way of translating the past, does your perspective change when that fiction has been translated from another language? As some of the season’s best new historical novels suggest, this added dimension can make a book even richer, even more provocative. And none demonstrates that better than Frank Wynne’s translation of Alice Zeniter’s
THE ART OF LOSING (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 434 pp., $28), which won France’s Prix Goncourt des Lycéens. Its central character is a young Frenchwoman attempting to reconnect with the Algeria that shaped and then silenced her paternal grandfather.