In this classic tale of British life between the World Wars, Waugh parts company with the satire of his earlier works to examine affairs of the heart. Charles Ryder finds himself stationed at Brideshead, the family seat of Lord and Lady Marchmain. Exhausted by the war, he takes refuge in recalling his time spent with the heirs to the estate before the war--years spent enthralled by the beautiful but dissolute Sebastian and later in a more conventional relationship with Sebastian's sister Julia. Ryder portrays a family divided by an uncertain investment in Roman Catholicism and by their confusion over where the elite fit in the modern world.
* from Publishers Weekly
The wellsprings of desire and the impediments to love come brilliantly into focus in Evelyn Waugh's masterpiece-a novel that immerses us in the glittering and seductive world of English aristocracy in the waning days of the empire. Through the story of Charles Ryder's entanglement with the Flytes, a great Catholic family, Evelyn Waugh charts the passing of the privileged world he knew in his own youth and vividly recalls the sensuous pleasures denied him by wartime austerities. At once romantic, sensuous, comic, and somber, Brideshead Revisited transcends Waugh's early satiric explorations and reveals him to be an elegiac, lyrical novelist of the utmost feeling and lucidity.
* from the Back Bay Books edition
Reading Schedule for November 2015
Week of November 1 : The Prologue - Book I : Chapter 2 Week of November 8 : Book I : Chapters 3 - 5 Week of November 15 : Book II : Chapters 1 - 3 Week of November 22 : Book III : Chapters 1 - 3 Week of November 29 : Book III : Chapter 4 - The Epilogue
* from Publishers Weekly
The wellsprings of desire and the impediments to love come brilliantly into focus in Evelyn Waugh's masterpiece-a novel that immerses us in the glittering and seductive world of English aristocracy in the waning days of the empire.
Through the story of Charles Ryder's entanglement with the Flytes, a great Catholic family, Evelyn Waugh charts the passing of the privileged world he knew in his own youth and vividly recalls the sensuous pleasures denied him by wartime austerities. At once romantic, sensuous, comic, and somber, Brideshead Revisited transcends Waugh's early satiric explorations and reveals him to be an elegiac, lyrical novelist of the utmost feeling and lucidity.
* from the Back Bay Books edition
Reading Schedule for November 2015
Week of November 1 : The Prologue - Book I : Chapter 2
Week of November 8 : Book I : Chapters 3 - 5
Week of November 15 : Book II : Chapters 1 - 3
Week of November 22 : Book III : Chapters 1 - 3
Week of November 29 : Book III : Chapter 4 - The Epilogue