Fr. 22.50

The Temple

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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"Beyond the wonderful insights ... there is a portrait of the world in the eye of the storm between two world wars. It is a novel of awakening -- awakening to sex, yes ... but also an awakening to the presence of evil in the world and to the possibilities of love and friendship." -- The Bloomsbury Review


Summary

The story behind this novel by one of twentieth-century Britain’s great poets and men of letters is nearly as remarkable as the book itself. Not long ago, a friend just returned from America told the author that he had read in the Spender manuscript collection of the University of Texas a novel called The Temple and dated 1929. Stephen Spender immediately obtained a copy of his old draft manuscript—admired in the early thirties by his London publisher, but remaining unpublished because of the sensitivity of the contents and fear of libel actions—and read it with astonished pleasure. He then rewrote it in part, taking care not to diminish its ardent youthfulness, its innocence and cynicism, and the immediacy of its view of the last days of Weimar Germany, on the eve of Hitler’s rise to power.

It is, as one might expect, an autobiographical novel. Vividly present along with the protagonist, and not much disguised, are the two other members of the famous triumvirate Auden-Spender-Isherwood. Here are the experiences of a twenty-year-old Oxford poet on vacation in Hamburg, who then travels down the Rhine with two companions. We see his response to the bronzed young Germans—the Children of the Sun—their friendships, parties, sexuality, naturism (especially their cult of the naked body), and all the gauche hedonism that was soon to vanish under the Nazis.

Clearly The Temple is a novel of historical and literary importance. But it is, as well, an entertaining and moving story of a young man’s awakening.

Product details

Authors Spender, Stephen Spender
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 07.08.1997
 
EAN 9780802135247
ISBN 978-0-8021-3524-7
No. of pages 224
Dimensions 140 mm x 210 mm x 14 mm
Weight 270 g
Subjects Fiction > Narrative literature

Hamburg, FICTION / Coming of Age, Germany, Fiction: general & literary, c 1920 to c 1929, Relating to gay people, FICTION / LGBT / Gay, TOPICAL / LGBT

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