roothwa.blogg.se

Folio society evelyn waugh
Folio society evelyn waugh





folio society evelyn waugh folio society evelyn waugh

“Sebastian is in love with his own childhood. Ryder is intoxicated, in more ways than one, but as he grows closer to Sebastian, and meets members of his family during visits to their home, Brideshead, he learns that there is a spreading darkness and a sadness within his friend that he is powerless to arrest. He soon ditches the studious friends he makes in his early weeks for the captivating and beautiful Sebastian Flyte, who carries his teddy bear Aloysius around with him, hangs out with a group of catty (mostly) homosexuals, and abandons the pursuit of academia for prowess in the consumption of liquor. For many, their student years are looked back upon with great fondness as hedonistic and boozy, and a time when great friendships were forged. Time flits back and forth between the ‘present’, the mid-1940s, in a world torn apart by conflict, and the period from the 1920s, from the moment narrator Charles Ryder heads to university for an encounter that will change his life.įew novels have so brilliantly encapsulated periods of life as Brideshead Revisited. It looked back over a period that was vanishing – where gentry owned vast swathes of land, and enjoyed the privileges of wealth and titles, when dropping the family name was sufficient to secure a place at Oxford. The book first entranced readers at the end of the Second World War. Brideshead Revisited – the story of the aristocratic English Marchmain family reflected upon by a world- and war-weary outsider, Charles Ryder, is probably Evelyn Waugh’s most-celebrated and best-remembered novel.







Folio society evelyn waugh