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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.' Long out of print, the original Heinemann and Penguin
editions cut out some 60,000 words of the author's original
text.This Zephyr 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.
THE REDISCOVERED BRITISH MASTERPIECE 'Consider yourself an
experiment of the gods in what a man can endure...' Paul Davenant,
has arrived at a sanatorium in the Swiss Alps with hopes of a full
cure and a normal life. But as the weeks and months pass
interminably by, he undergoes endless tests and medical procedures,
each more horrific and dehumanizing than the last, all the while
facing the possibility that his case may be hopeless. Despite the
pain, indignity, and tediousness, Davenant never loses sight of the
outrageous, farcical side to his situation, the absurdity of it
all. And when he falls in love with a fellow patient, he becomes
determined to recover his health. Will he succeed, or will all the
tortures he has endured have been for nothing? When The Rack was
first published in 1958, the critical acclaim was universal:
reviewers compared it with the works of Proust, Mann, and Camus and
declared it a masterwork destined to take its place among the great
novels of the 20th century. This edition will reclaim its status.
PRAISE FOR THE RACK 'I distrust anything deemed a cult classic,
often a polite term for a book no one enjoys. But this very moving
novel set in a TB sanatorium in Switzerland delivers gruelling
descriptions of primitive treatments and a powerful love story'
Sebastian Faulks 'There are certain books we call great for want of
a better term, that rise like monuments above the cemeteries of
literature: Clarissa Harlowe, Great Expectations, Ulysses. The Rack
to my mind is one of this company' Graham Greene 'Quite possibly a
masterpiece' Irish Times 'Book of the year if there ever was one'
V. S. Pritchett, New Statesman 'A work of sombre power, of soaring
comedy' Cyril Connolly, Sunday Times
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