Appius and Virginia
GE Trevelyan author Brad Bigelow editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Eye Books
Published:16th Nov '20
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A rediscovered work by one of the most exciting novelists of the 1930s
Virginia Hutton embarks upon an experiment. She will take an ape and raise it as a human child. She purchases an infant orangutan and names him Appius. She clothes him, feeds him, and puts him to bed in a cot every night. As Appius grows older, she teaches him to dress himself, to speak, to read, to stand and walk up straight, to eat his meals at the dining table with a knife and fork. She teaches him how to be human. The young orangutan is not always a willing student. His relationship with Virginia becomes fraught and flits between that of mother and child, teacher and student, scientist and experiment. But as Appius gains knowledge he moves ever closer to the one discovery Virginia does not want him to make: that of his true origins. Appius and Virginia explores the ongoing conflict between nature and nurture. It is also a chilling and unforgettable portrait of loneliness.
'One of the most inventive novelists of her generation; this is a long-overdue return' - Times Literary Supplement, 'A novel of introspection and well-crafted realisation, a gradual unravelling of certainties, [told with] real innovative skill and originality. Trevelyan owes a clear debt of gratitude to Mary Shelley: Appius is the victim of human ambition and folly' - Yorkshire Times, 'It takes a major talent to tell such a nuanced, awful story without flinching, and the welcome rediscovery of G.E. Trevelyan's success has a lot to teach us, on multiple levels' - Minor Literatures
ISBN: 9781785632181
Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 14mm
Weight: unknown
240 pages
New edition