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Blood from the Sky (Paperback)
Loot Price: R307
Discovery Miles 3 070
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Blood from the Sky (Paperback)
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Loot Price R307
Discovery Miles 3 070
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R317
Discovery Miles: 3 170
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Published under a pseudonym, A E Ellis, and appearing in 1958 to
considerable acclaim, The Rack is a novel about the ordeal of being
deathly ill. A young English student, Paul, is sent to a Swiss
sanatorium just after the end of the second world war. At a time
when effective medication for tuberculosis was unknown, Paul
undergoes an unimaginable regime of regimented medical
intervention, both physical and mental. His fellow patients fare no
better. Yet, as the poet Edwin Muir wrote in his original review in
the Observer: 'The Rack does not deal obviously with disease and
suffering; it describes, sometimes very amusingly, the life of the
sanatorium: the sardonic professional kindness of the doctors,
liable suddenly to break under pressure, the badness of the food,
the endless pre-occupation of the patients with their symptoms, and
the sexual promiscuity...Behind the book one has the impression of
an unusual and powerful mind.' Graham Greene considered it a
masterpiece; the Times Literary Supplement believed 'the book
exercises a complete fascination...a deeply impressive
performance', and Time and Tide hailed The Rack as '...terrific. To
read it is itself an experience.' Penelope Mortimer wrote: 'It is
often glibly said that a work of art is an experience - The Rack is
one of the rare instances of this actually being so. It is a book
which must, inevitably, have a permanent effect on the reader. In
this case the usual terms of praise become almost meaningless. So
powerful is Mr Ellis's inspiration, so driven by the urgent
necessity of expression, that one is not so much conscious of
having read a account of an ordeal as of having lived through two
years of unbearable physical and mental agony - and survived.' Long
out of print, the original Heinemann and Penguin editions cut out
some 60,000 words of the author's original text. Elliott &
Thompson's Gold Edition will restore the complete text to provide
today's reader with a chance to discover the definitive edition of
one of the great English novels of the last century.
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