Pandervils (e-bog) af Gerald Bullett, Bullett

Pandervils e-bog

63,40 DKK
This omnibus contains The History of Egg Pandervil and Nicky, Son of Egg.Bullett writes in the 1930 edition 'In this volume the two parts of one novel, divided hitherto by the accident of their several publication, appear as a continuous whole: which is to say, as originally planned by their author. It was not the tale of Egg but of Nicky that I sat down to tell... only to discover, after writing…
This omnibus contains The History of Egg Pandervil and Nicky, Son of Egg.Bullett writes in the 1930 edition 'In this volume the two parts of one novel, divided hitherto by the accident of their several publication, appear as a continuous whole: which is to say, as originally planned by their author. It was not the tale of Egg but of Nicky that I sat down to tell... only to discover, after writing a few paragraphs, that of these two Pandervils, father and youngest son, the father, being overscored with the intimate tracery of time, was at the moment the far likelier to engage my passionate interest... So it is that the heart of Egg Pandervil, which... becomes, and remains to the end, the true heart of this novel.'
E-bog 63,40 DKK
Forfattere Gerald Bullett, Bullett (forfatter)
Udgivet 28.09.2011
Længde 536 sider
Genrer Fiction and Related items
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781448203369

This omnibus contains The History of Egg Pandervil and Nicky, Son of Egg.Bullett writes in the 1930 edition 'In this volume the two parts of one novel, divided hitherto by the accident of their several publication, appear as a continuous whole: which is to say, as originally planned by their author. It was not the tale of Egg but of Nicky that I sat down to tell... only to discover, after writing a few paragraphs, that of these two Pandervils, father and youngest son, the father, being overscored with the intimate tracery of time, was at the moment the far likelier to engage my passionate interest... So it is that the heart of Egg Pandervil, which... becomes, and remains to the end, the true heart of this novel.'