An exploration of the ideas, groupings and the social tensions that shaped the transformation of life caused by the changes of modernity in art, science, politics and philosophy
Malcolm Bradbury Libros
Malcolm Bradbury fue un aclamado autor y académico inglés, conocido principalmente por sus novelas. Sus obras, a menudo ambientadas en la vida universitaria, exploran constantemente temas más oscuros con un estilo y un lenguaje menos juguetones en comparación con sus contemporáneos. Bradbury satirizó magistralmente la existencia académica, profundizando en sus hipocresías y complejidades a través de narrativas que resonaron ampliamente. Más allá de su ficción, su perspicaz crítica literaria y sus extensos guiones televisivos consolidaron aún más su profunda influencia en la literatura y los medios británicos.







Inside Trading
- 80 páginas
- 3 horas de lectura
The only full-length stage play by the acclaimed novelist and critic Malcolm Bradbury
Since Postmortem garnered critical acclaim and a record-breaking five awards for a first crime novel, the Scarpetta novels have often been imitated, but never bettered. Against her own judgement and the advice of Benton Wesley and her niece, Lucy, Scarpetta agrees to return to Virginia as a consultant pathologist on a case involving the death of a fourteen-year-old girl. Accompanied by Pete Marino she finds the once familiar territory of her morgue and her department much changed, and the new Chief Medical Examiner treats her with disdain despite the obvious fact that he is in desperate need of her expertise. But professional as ever, she re-examines the evidence and proves the girl was murdered. She also finds trace evidence which matches that found on an accident victim and at the scene where one of Lucy's operatives was attacked. It is not only a forensic puzzle, but opens up the probability that someone is after those closest to Scarpetta. Visit the author's website at www.patriciacornwell.com
An account of the development of the British novel in the 20th century, and a companion volume to the author's "The Modern American Novel". The various main lines are laid out, and the book includes a detailed survey of post-war writing and the scene today.
This sparkling anthology offers 29 of the best marriages of comedy and fiction. A deliciously varied collection of comic short stories, representing the cream of twentieth century humour.
"Focuses on writers and works that are intimately bound up with a place and a time, capturing a town, a city, a region, in its literary heyday."--Jacket.
This book, in ten succinct essays, examines the ten "greats" of early 20th century literature. In each case the author's most important work is discussed in the context of the author's life, other writings and place in the modernist movement.
The Novel Today
- 272 páginas
- 10 horas de lectura
A collection of papers by contemporary novelists considering the authors' side of the debate about the nature of the modern novel. Those contributing include Iris Murdoch, Saul Bellow, Doris Lessing, Philip Roth and John Fowles.
A monumental critical history that sums up the American literary achievement from Henry James to Thomas Pynchon. Beginning with the 1890s and the seminal novels of Henry James and Theodore Dreiser, this highly acclaimed volume charts the flowering of the American narrative tradition. It takes in Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Faulkner; the emergence of Jewish and African-American literatures; and the works of Thomas Pynchon, Philip Roth, and Kurt Vonnegut. Updated to consider the most important fiction of the 1980s and early 90s, The Modern American Novel is a comprehensive critical history of American literary achievement."
To the Hermitage
- 512 páginas
- 18 horas de lectura
To the Hermitage tells two stories. The first is of the narrator, a novelist, on a trip to Stockholm and Russia for an academic seminar called the Diderot Project. The second takes place two hundred years earlier and recreates the journey the French philosopher Denis Diderot made to Russia at the invitation of Catherine the Great, a woman whose influence could change the path of history . . . Malcolm Bradbury's last novel is rich with his satirical wit, but it is also deeply personal and weaves a wonderfully wry self-portrait.



