Forrest Reid (1875-1947), the Ulster novelist, spent his life in
Belfast, in the north of Ireland, save for a period as an
undergraduate at Christ's College, Cambridge, where he received a
B.A. in 1908. He numbered among his many friends and acquaintances
George William Russell (A. E.), E. M. Forster, Edmund Gosse, C. S.
Lewis, and Walter de le Mare, as well as various Uranians such as
Theo Bartholomew, Osbert Burdett, and Mark Andre Raffalovich.
Despite his sixteen novels, his two autobiographies, and a range
of other works, despite being a founding member of the Irish
Academy of Letters and an honorary Doctor of Letters of Queen's
University in Belfast, despite his novel "Young Tom" being awarded
the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, Forrest Reid closely borders
both oblivion and canonicity. However, this author, who has been
aptly dubbed the "Arch-Priest of a Minor Cult," deserves
reconsideration and perhaps a place in the pantheon of English
letters.
"The Tom Barber Trilogy" - composed of the very distinct novels
"Uncle Stephen" (1931), "The Retreat; or, The Machinations of
Henry" (1936), and "Young Tom; or, Very Mixed Company" (1944) - is
Forrest Reid's magnum opus. The present scholarly edition presents
those three novels as clean texts (in Volume I), followed by a
study of Forrest Reid and explanatory notes for the trilogy (in
Volume II).
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