Author:Henry Green,D J Taylor

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY D. J. TAYLOR
These three brilliant novels span Henry Green's career as a novelist and display his unique talents as a writer. Nothing is a tale of the merry-go-round of love, marriage and infidelity, and the ceaseless tussle of innocence versus experience. Doting sets the middle-aged male infatuation for pretty girls against the comfortable affection of wives and old friends, delving into the complications of burgeoning affairs and boring marriages. In Blindness, Green's first novel, a young man is blinded in a senseless accident but thereafter discovers new imaginative powers.
The finest living English novelist
—— W. H. AudenExperimental in tone; spare and sensuous by turns, irradiated by stylistic fireworks... his novels are dazzling exercises in form
—— D.J Taylor , IndependentOne cannot think of another modernist writer so neglected and yet so warmly humane
—— The TimesHenry Green's novels are among the most dazzling, inventive and individual of the last century... his writing is wonderfully seductive - as oblique, suggestive and full of surprises as life itself
—— Daily TelegraphThe most curious imagination in the English novel
—— V.S. PritchettGripping and beautifully written
—— RED MagazineDelivers a dazzling high wire act between fact and fiction, and shines light from every angle on the divisive topic of American polygamy in a compelling and timely novel
—— Danny Scheinmann, author of Random Acts of Heroic LoveComing on the heels of the newsmaking raid on the FLDS polygamist sect in Texas, this lyrical yet fact-packed epic about the Mormon practice of plural marriage is both timely and transporting... a literary tour de force
—— People MagazineEbershoff's sensitive and topical tale of hijacked religion and sexual tyranny, true community and freedom, provides much food for thought in the mode of such seriously popular writers as Jodi Picoult
—— Booklist (starred & 'Up Front' review)The 19th Wife is a big book, in every sense of the word... it does that thing all good novels do: it entertains us
—— LA TimesEmploying the dual narrive idea with aplomb... dishes the dirt on what it's really like being one of many wives. Funny, profound and utterly transporting
—— Marie ClaireThis exquisite tour de force explores the dark roots of polygamy and its modern-day fruit in a renegade cult... compelling... essential reading
—— Publishers Weekly (starred/'Pick of theWeek')Wonderful... like A.S.Byatt, whose brilliant novel Possession also split the narrative between time periods, Ebershoff uses a series of fictionalized documents to add depth and perspective to his tale... thought-provoking
—— Sacramento News & ReviewFascinating... demonstrates abundant virtuosity, as he convincingly inhabits the voices of both a nineteenth-century Mormon and a contemporary gay youth excommunicated from the church, while also managing to say something about the mysterious power of faith
—— New YorkerBoth strands of the novel come together to form a fascinating overview of "Mormondom". The day-to-day realities of polygamy are brought home in the small domestic detail
—— IndependentWeaves a surprising amount of information into the dual narratives... [teaches] about Mormonism and the cancer of polygamy at its heart...well crafted to maintain suspense... at its best when he describes the Utah desert and mountains, where he finds brutality, violence and bucolic beauty
—— TLSA great, compulsive read... the combination of faith, murder, sex, salvation and ultimately, love, is a heady mix
—— SagaAlthough disturbing and heart-wrenching in parts, this book is an informative, and engaging whodunnit thriller
—— Yorkshire Evening PostThe funniest writer ever to put words to paper
—— Hugh LaurieThe greatest comic writer ever
—— Douglas AdamsP.G. Wodehouse wrote the best English comic novels of the century
—— Sebastian FaulksSublime comic genius
—— Ben EltonP.G. Wodehouse wrote the best English comic novels of the century
—— Sebastian FaulksSublime comic genius
—— Ben EltonWodehouse's idyllic world can never stale. He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own. He has made a world for us to live in and delight in
—— Evelyn Waugh






