Détails du livre
Format
Kindle
Pages
235
Langue
Anglais
Publié
Dec 26, 2011
Éditeur
Victorian Secrets Limited
Description
Originally published in 1891, The Light that Failed is Rudyard Kipling’s semi-autobiographical first novel. Critics who had praised him for Plain Tales from the Hills were shocked at the unhappy ending and deviation from his usual style, but none could deny the power of Kipling’s writing.
The Light that Failed tells the story of war artist Dick Heldar, his doomed love for childhood sweetheart Maisie, and his descent into blindness. Through Dick, Kipling considers the relationship between Art and Life, espousing his belief that the artist has a duty to paint only what he knows to be true.
The reality pursued by Kipling is vividly portrayed in his descriptions of the battlefields of the Sudan and the fleshpits of Port Said. These near-Naturalistic depictions led to comparisons with Zola and show a very different Kipling from the one famous for his Anglo-Indian tales.
This edition includes:
* critical introduction
* biography of Kipling
* suggestions for further reading
* explanatory footnotes
* alternative “happy ending” from the serialised version in Lippincott’s Magazine
* contemporary reviews
* extracts from The City of Dreadful Night, Fuzzy Wuzzy, Vitaï Lampada, and The Picture of Dorian Gray
* Dürer’s Melencolia I
The Light that Failed tells the story of war artist Dick Heldar, his doomed love for childhood sweetheart Maisie, and his descent into blindness. Through Dick, Kipling considers the relationship between Art and Life, espousing his belief that the artist has a duty to paint only what he knows to be true.
The reality pursued by Kipling is vividly portrayed in his descriptions of the battlefields of the Sudan and the fleshpits of Port Said. These near-Naturalistic depictions led to comparisons with Zola and show a very different Kipling from the one famous for his Anglo-Indian tales.
This edition includes:
* critical introduction
* biography of Kipling
* suggestions for further reading
* explanatory footnotes
* alternative “happy ending” from the serialised version in Lippincott’s Magazine
* contemporary reviews
* extracts from The City of Dreadful Night, Fuzzy Wuzzy, Vitaï Lampada, and The Picture of Dorian Gray
* Dürer’s Melencolia I
Genres
Romance
Biographie
Action & Aventure
Art et Photographie
Contemporain