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In After the Fireworks, three lost classic pieces of short fiction by Aldous Huxley, author of Brave New World, are collected for the first time, with an original foreword by National Book Critics Circle Award winner Gary Giddins.
In the title novella, Rome is the stunning backdrop for a renowned novelist’s dangerous affair. “Uncle Spencer” is the tale of an aging World War I veteran’s quest for the lost love he met in a prison during the war, and “Two or Three Graces,” recounts a destructive writer’s abusive relationship with an impressionable housewife. Now brought back in print for the first time in seventy-five years, the novellas newly collected in After the Fireworks reveal Aldous Huxley at the height of his powers.
432 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1933
"Some day, it may be, the successful novellist will write about man's relation to God, to nature, to his own thoughts and the obscure reality on which they work, not about man's relation to woman. Meanwhile, however...", p 342This very much looks like the idea behind Eyeless in Gaza published twelve years later. This was the transformative book of my teenage years, and it was stimulating to rethink its genesis.