Henry Green
Havoc in the House of Fiction
Format:Paperback
Publisher:McFarland & Co Inc
Published:30th Nov '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
By mid-career, many successful writers have found a groove and their readers come to expect a familiar consistency and fidelity. Not so with Henry Green (1905-1973). He prefers uncertainty over reason and fragmentation over cohesion, and rarely lets the reader settle into a nice cozy read. Evil, he suggests, can be as instructive as good. Through Green's use of paradoxical and ambiguous language, his novels bring texture to the flatness of life, making the world seem bigger and closer. We soon stop worrying about what Hitler's bombs have in store for the Londoners of Caught (1943) and Back (1946) and start thinking about what they have in store for each other. Praised in his lifetime as England's top fiction author, Green is largely overlooked today. This book presents a comprehensive analysis of his work for a new generation of readers.
“Henry Green (1905–73) is a writer’s writer. He has endured severe reverses of popularity and familiarity, more than once going from high visibility, thanks to praise by significant critics, to almost complete eclipse. This study, built on close readings of Green’s major novels, analyzes why Green is so easily overlooked and offers multiple reasons for Green’s rightful place alongside Joyce, Woolf, and Eliot.... One leaves this study with a thorough knowledge of Green’s oeuvre and full insight into his mastery of high modernism, including stream-of-consciousness, distorted time signatures, and fractured perceptions...recommended”—Choice.
ISBN: 9781476671116
Dimensions: 254mm x 178mm x 13mm
Weight: 454g
258 pages