Items related to Caught

Green, Henry Caught ISBN 13: 9781860461118

Caught - Softcover

 
9781860461118: Caught

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Synopsis

During the Blitz, Henry Green served on the London Auxiliary Fire Service, and this experience lies behind Caught, published when the bombing had only recently ended. Like Green, Richard Roe, the hero of this resolutely unheroic book, comes from the upper class. His wife remains at their country estate, far from the threatened city, while Roe serves under Pye, a professional fireman whose deranged sister once kidnapped Roe's young son, a bad memory that complicates the relationship between these two very different men. The book opens as the various members of the brigade are having practice runs and fighting boredom and sleeping around in the months before the attack from the air. It ends with Roe, who has been injured in the bombing, back in the country, describing and trying to come to terms with the apocalyptic conflagration in which he and his fellows were caught, putting into question the very notion of ordinary life.

Caught was censored at the insistence of its publisher, Leonard Woolf, when it came out in 1943. This is the first American edition of the book to appear as Green intended.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

Review

"Henry Green's "Caught," inspired by his experiences of fire-fighting during the Blitz, captures the oddness as well as the vividness of many dramatic wartime incidents." Sarah Waters, "The Guardian"
Praise for Henry Green:
"Seductive and pleasing...[an]original and engaging author, who wrote about social class--or, rather, the social classes, all of them--with a mordancy and affection that have seldom been surpassed...Henry Green wrote the way he did, in other words, because he couldn't write any other way; he was not a fabulist but a realist, who described the world just as he experienced it." Charles McGrath, "The New York Times"
"Green's working aesthetic was delicate, allusive, and cryptic... He could produce a vivid image with a minimum of words...Green himself ardently mixes darkness and light, and his work must always appeal to those readers who, like him, do not fear life's inevitable contradictions." Brooke Allen, "New Criterion"
"One of the most piquant and original English writers not only of his generation but of the century." John Updike, "The New Yorker""

"Green's acrobatic syntax yields not an easy reading experience but a rewarding one, as he weaves multiple narratives over and through one another, reeling among perspective shifts, zigzagging through clouds of memory and conjecture .Dense and often funny, this reissue is necessary reading for fans of both Green and modernist fiction. Kirkusstarred review
"Henry Green's Caught, inspired by his experiences of fire-fighting during the Blitz, captures the oddness as well as the vividness of many dramatic wartime incidents." Sarah Waters, The Guardian
Praise for Henry Green:
"Seductive and pleasing...[an]original and engaging author, who wrote about social class--or, rather, the social classes, all of them--with a mordancy and affection that have seldom been surpassed...Henry Green wrote the way he did, in other words, because he couldn't write any other way; he was not a fabulist but a realist, who described the world just as he experienced it." Charles McGrath, The New York Times
"Green's working aesthetic was delicate, allusive, and cryptic... He could produce a vivid image with a minimum of words...Green himself ardently mixes darkness and light, and his work must always appeal to those readers who, like him, do not fear life's inevitable contradictions." Brooke Allen, New Criterion
"One of the most piquant and original English writers not only of his generation but of the century." John Updike, The New Yorker"

In its lyrical treatment of ordinary London lives it has a mood and style quite unlike anything else I ve come across in other fiction of the time. Sarah Waters, The Sunday Times
The subject of all Henry Green s later novels is the inner language and landscape in which his characters lead their real lives. . . . This distinctly upper-class artist is pretty well the first English novelist to have listened to working-class speech and to have understood its overtones and undertones. . . . He could of course have been playing a clever game; but he was not. The morbid, the comic, the lyrical, and even the mannered aspects of his talent were not affected: fierce, fantastic and eccentric as it could be, his material came from the outside and mingled with his nature. V.S. Pritchett
"Green's acrobatic syntax yields not an easy reading experience but a rewarding one, as he weaves multiple narratives over and through one another, reeling among perspective shifts, zigzagging through clouds of memory and conjecture .Dense and often funny, this reissue is necessary reading for fans of both Green and modernist fiction. Kirkusstarred review
Praise for Henry Green:
"Seductive and pleasing...[an]original and engaging author, who wrote about social class--or, rather, the social classes, all of them--with a mordancy and affection that have seldom been surpassed...Henry Green wrote the way he did, in other words, because he couldn't write any other way; he was not a fabulist but a realist, who described the world just as he experienced it." Charles McGrath, The New York Times
"Green's working aesthetic was delicate, allusive, and cryptic... He could produce a vivid image with a minimum of words...Green himself ardently mixes darkness and light, and his work must always appeal to those readers who, like him, do not fear life's inevitable contradictions." Brooke Allen, New Criterion
"One of the most piquant and original English writers not only of his generation but of the century." John Updike, The New Yorker"

"First published in 1943 and now reissued in the New York Review Classics series, Caught manages the improbable feat of being both a harrowing war story of London during the Blitz and a sharply observed comedy about social class. Green was a silver-spoon aristocrat, but his ear for common speech was as keen as Dickens's." --Charles McGrath, The New York Times Book Review

"In its lyrical treatment of ordinary London lives it has a mood and style quite unlike anything else I've come across in other fiction of the time." --Sarah Waters, The Sunday Times

"The subject of all Henry Green's later novels is the inner language and landscape in which his characters lead their real lives. . . . This distinctly upper-class artist is pretty well the first English novelist to have listened to working-class speech and to have understood its overtones and undertones. . . . He could of course have been playing a clever game; but he was not. The morbid, the comic, the lyrical, and even the mannered aspects of his talent were not affected: fierce, fantastic and eccentric as it could be, his material came from the outside and mingled with his nature." --V.S. Pritchett

"Green's acrobatic syntax yields not an easy reading experience but a rewarding one, as he weaves multiple narratives over and through one another, reeling among perspective shifts, zigzagging through clouds of memory and conjecture....Dense and often funny, this reissue is necessary reading for fans of both Green and modernist fiction." --Kirkus starred review

Praise for Henry Green:

"Seductive and pleasing...[an]original and engaging author, who wrote about social class--or, rather, the social classes, all of them--with a mordancy and affection that have seldom been surpassed...Henry Green wrote the way he did, in other words, because he couldn't write any other way; he was not a fabulist but a realist, who described the world just as he experienced it." --Charles McGrath, The New York Times

"Green's working aesthetic was delicate, allusive, and cryptic... He could produce a vivid image with a minimum of words...Green himself ardently mixes darkness and light, and his work must always appeal to those readers who, like him, do not fear life's inevitable contradictions." --Brooke Allen, New Criterion

"One of the most piquant and original English writers not only of his generation but of the century." --John Updike, The New Yorker

Green's gift is that he is able to communicate...that feeling of being present in history before it becomes history, of being adrift in a story with many words left yet unwritten.
--Michalle Gould, The Rumpus

Green's acrobatic syntax yields not an easy reading experience but a rewarding one, as he weaves multiple narratives over and through one another, reeling among perspective shifts, zigzagging through clouds of memory and conjecture....Dense and often funny, this reissue is necessary reading for fans of both Green and modernist fiction.
--Kirkus
starred review

From the Back Cover

"This is Mr Green's best book...Must be read by anyone who claims a serious interest in the novel." Alan Pryce-Jones, Observer

When the war breaks out, Roe, a well-to-do widower with a young son, Christopher, volunteers for the Auxiliary Fire Service in London, and is trained under the a professional fire officer, Pye. The two men discover that a quite different link already exists between them: it was Pye's strange, disturbed sister who once upon a time abducted Christopher and kept him in her room until Pye rescued the terrified child. In the apocalyptic atmosphere of the Blitz the relationship between the two men develops as each of them grapples with his own troubled emotional attachments, the one to his dead wife, the other to his unhappy sister. Inevitably matters come to head when history shows signs of repeating itself. The subtle handling of relationships, the brillance of the dialogue and description - including one of the best accounts ever written of London under the Blitz - establish Caught as one of Henry Green's most powerful novels.

"Excellently told, entirely original, and in its own way, remarkably satisfying." Margery Allingham, Time and Tide

"An ambitious and original writer, with a feeling for symbolism and experiment which he employs with great honesty and power. His account of the first fire blitz is terrific." John Hampson, Spectator

"Should be read by anyone who believes that the English novel has died a natural death." Philip Toynbee, New Statesman

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

  • PublisherThe Harvill Press
  • Publication date1991
  • ISBN 10 1860461115
  • ISBN 13 9781860461118
  • BindingPaperback
  • Edition number1

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