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The Polyglots: William Gerhardie

Synopsis:

First published in 1925, this is perhaps the most acclaimed of William Gerhardie's novels and was celebrated by Anthony Powell as 'a classic'. Like his first novel, Futility, The Polyglots draws largely on personal experience. It is the story of an eccentric Belgian family living in the Far East in the uncertain years after World War I and the Russian Revolution. The tale is recounted by their dryly conceited young English relative, Captain Georges Hamlet Alexander Diabologh, who comes to stay with them during a military mission. Teeming with bizarre characters - depressives, obsessives, paranoiacs, hypochondriacs, and sex maniacs - Gerhardie paints a brilliantly absurd world where the comic and the tragic are profoundly and irrevocably entwined.

'William Gerhardie is one of our immortals. He is our Gogol's Overcoat. We all came out of him.' Olivia Manning

'He is a comic writer of genius ... but his art is profoundly serious.' C. P. Snow

Tags:

Categorised as:
Fiction
Sub-categories:
General Fiction
Places:
Far East
Genres & Themes:
Eccentrics; Faber Finds; Military
The Polyglots book cover
Selected edition:
Paperback
ISBN:
9780571244423
Published:
21.08.2008
No of pages:
336

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