Japanese alcoholic beverage made from fermented rice; usually served hot.
British writer of short stories (1870-1916)
1I love Saki: very funny and always a sting in the tale.
2Nora lay on the bed in her odd cell, reading Saki.
3Unagi-Saki, Japan In Japanese cuisine, almost every job has a specific knife for it.
4But the world has grown into a place that would have suited Saki better.
5As well as physical death, Saki's animals unleash social mortification.
6The books of "Saki" were, for me at least, in the second class.
7Such mastery infers a passion for tidiness which was not in the boyish Saki's equipment.
8Criticism The satire of Saki by George James Spears.
9It was Saki-or Saki's equivalent-whoopened the door.
10Let us take a sample or two of "Saki, 1911."
11What is Saki's manner, what his magic talisman?
12No doubt Saki would have been amused by this grisly and comic depiction of the family legend.
13Some say the misanthropy that made Saki a master of exposing hypocrisy inclined him to personal bigotry.
14A strange exotic creature, this Saki, to us many others who were trying to do it too.
15The pen name Saki is taken from the name of the cupbearer in the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.
16Balancing off-beat humour with eerie menace, Wolff comes increasingly closer to Saki than do any of his peers.