P. H. Newby (1918–1997)
Autore di Something to Answer For
Sull'Autore
P.H. Newby, known as Howard Newby, was born in Crowborough, Sussex on June 25, 1918 and was educated at Hanley Castle Grammar School in Worcestershire, and St Paul's College of Education in Cheltenham, England. Newby served in the British Army during World War II and then took a teaching position mostra altro at Fouad 1st University in Cairo. He also worked for the BBC, becoming Controller of the Third Programme. Newby published a novel, "A Journey to the Interior," in 1945. In 1969, he was the first winner of the Booker Prize, a British literary prize given to a Commonwealth writer for the best novel published in the U.K. during the previous year, for "Something to Answer For." He died on September 6, 1997. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Unknown
Opere di P. H. Newby
A Season in England 3 copie
Agents and Witnesses 2 copie
Opere correlate
Tales from the Arabian Nights: Selected from The Book Of The Thousand Nights And A Night (1885) — A cura di — 132 copie
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome canonico
- Newby, P. H.
- Nome legale
- Newby, Percy Howard
- Data di nascita
- 1918-06-25
- Data di morte
- 1997-09-06
- Sesso
- male
- Nazionalità
- UK
- Organizzazioni
- BBC
- Premi e riconoscimenti
- Order of the British Empire (Commander)
Utenti
Recensioni
Liste
Premi e riconoscimenti
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 27
- Opere correlate
- 3
- Utenti
- 479
- Popolarità
- #51,492
- Voto
- 3.4
- Recensioni
- 10
- ISBN
- 46
- Lingue
- 2
Tom Passmore has been invalided out of the British army after traces of TB had been found in his blood after a fever. He finds a job as an academic in the University of Cairo and becomes fascinated by the country of Egypt. He finds it difficult to make friends, but strikes up a friendship with Tom Nash a fellow academic. Nash also struggles with friends, but Passmore gets invited home for dinner and becomes infatuated with Nash's young Greek wife Renée. Nash and Renée seem an unlikely couple, while Renée is strong and purposeful, Nash is weak and secretive. Tom Nash catches Typhoid, but before he dies he tells Passmore that he fears for Renée, because his estranged parents do not know he has married and she will find it difficult to live in Cairo because of their financial situation. When Nash dies Passmore asks Renée to marry him but she refuses. Passmore has the summer holidays to himself and he decides to go back to England with the intention of telling Nash's parent about the existence of a wife. Nash's parents are elderly and reclusive and they frighten Passmore a little especially when they seem to want Passmore to replace their estranged son. Passmore hesitates to tell them about Renée, but that decision is taken away from him when Renée arrives at the house. Passmore is completely out of his depth, when a merry-go-round of alliances develop in the household. Passmore still wants to marry Renée, but she thinks he is a bigger fool than her deceased husband.
The setting of the novel is towards the end of the second world war but life in the big house belonging to the Nashes feels few effects, Mr and Mrs Nash are an odd couple with Mrs Nash desperate to replace her lost son and Mr Nash worried about doing the right thing. It is a psychological novel that plays on the taught feelings within the household that become stretched to breaking point. P H Newby draws his characters well and leads them a merry dance. The woman are far stronger than the men, who are mostly clueless in understanding what is happening. It is by no means a comedy, but certainly Newby is holding up his characters to a certain amount of ridicule. Guilt, love and pride are some of the themes that run though this novel, which depicts well a social class and milieu that existed towards the end of the war in England. A good novel of its time 3.5 stars.… (altro)