- Italy's Meloni visits Trump in Florida
- 'Difficult' to be Vinicius: Real Madrid coach Ancelotti
- Ljutic edges Holdener for World Cup slalom victory
- Liverpool-Man Utd Premier League clash to go ahead despite snowfall
- Comeback king Muller wins Hong Kong Open to end Nishikori fairytale
- Red Cross says determining fate of Syria's missing 'huge challenge'
- Sarkozy: divisive French ex-president beset by legal woes
- India cricket loss to Australia sparks questions back home
- Sabalenka warms up for Australian Open with Brisbane win
- Gauff sweeps past Swiatek to lay down Australian Open marker
- Cummins lauds 'special' Australia team after India series win
- Naomi Osaka retires injured from Auckland Classic final
- NYC starts driver congestion charging despite opposition
- S. Korea's Yoon ignored cabinet opposition to martial law: prosecutors
- Frustrated Bumrah says India will benefit from Australia defeat
- Crowds, cracking cricket: Five talking points from Australia v India
- Henry, Young power New Zealand to nine-wicket ODI win over Sri Lanka
- Australia win gripping fifth India Test to take series 3-1
- Pistons top Timberwolves despite Edwards's 53 points
- South Koreans protest in snow as Yoon arrest deadline nears
- Australia win riveting fifth India Test to take series 3-1
- Henry takes four as Sri Lanka slump to 178 all out in New Zealand ODI
- Fresh South Korea protests expected as president arrest deadline nears
- Matsuyama maintains one-shot lead over Morikawa on low-scoring day at Sentry
- Australia 91 runs from victory in knife-edge fifth India Test
- Bezos's Blue Origin poised for first orbital launch next week
- Hollywood A-listers set to shine at Golden Globes
- Ravens secure AFC North with win over Browns
- Thousands line Suriname streets in homage to late dictator Bouterse
- Lille keep heat on Ligue 1 leaders, Lyon escape against Montpellier
- Bordeaux back on Top 14 summit as Toulouse frustrated at La Rochelle
- Messi misses Presidential Medal ceremony with Biden
- Blinken wades into political crisis with stop in South Korea
- Austria's chancellor to step down after coalition talks collapse
- Arsenal stumble in Premier League title race as Man City stroll
- Arsenal draw at Brighton edges Liverpool closer to Premier League title
- Exiled Venezuelan opposition leader to speak with Biden, visit US
- Napoli see off Fiorentina to top Serie A in rivals' absence
- Bordeaux take Top 14 lead as Toulon win overshadowed by Ollivon injury
- World's oldest person dies at 116 in Japan
- Man City still not 'like we were' despite West Ham rout: Guardiola
- Cartoonist quits Washington Post over rejected sketch mocking owner, Trump
- Haaland doubles up in Man City stroll as Spurs fume
- 39 bell tolls begin final national sendoff for Jimmy Carter
- Postecoglou angered by Newcastle snatch and grab at struggling Spurs
- Shah Test century tips tide in favour of Afghanistan
- Egypt apprehensive over Islamist win in Syria
- Gaza rescuers says 26 killed in Israeli strikes
- Isak fires Newcastle to victory at struggling Spurs
- Rickelton hits 259 as South Africa take control against Pakistan
British novelist David Lodge dies aged 89
British novelist David Lodge, who was shortlisted for the Booker Prize twice, has died at the age of 89, his publisher said on Friday.
The English author was best known for "Small World" and "Nice Work", which were nominated for the prestigious literary award in the 1980s.
He died "peacefully" on New Year's Day, Penguin Random House said in a statement, without giving a cause of death.
"His contribution to literary culture was immense, both in his criticism and through his masterful and iconic novels which have already become classics," Lodge's publisher, Liz Foley, said in a statement.
His family said they were "very proud" of Lodge, who was renowned for his plays, memoirs and TV scripts, as well as his books.
"Small World" (1984) and "Nice Work" (1988) came after "Changing Places" (1975) and made up his campus trilogy series about a fictional university called Rummidge.
It followed professors Philip Swallow from England and Morris Zapp from the United States and the cultural challenges they face when they swap universities for six months.
Lodge taught in the English department at the University of Birmingham between 1960 and 1987 before retiring to focus on writing.
P.Serra--PC