The Return of the Soldier (Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics)
₱1,145.00
Product Description
Writing her first novel during World War I, West examines the relationship between three women and a soldier suffering from shell-shock. This novel of an enclosed world invaded by public events also embodies in its characters the shifts in England’s class structures at the beginning of the twentieth century.
For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.
Amazon.com Review
It would be a crime to give away even the barest outline of Rebecca West’s apparently simple, always agonizing first novel. We shall say only that
The Return of the Soldier concerns the title character and three very different women to whom he is linked in very different ways–by blood, by marriage, and by love. It is also an imaginative study (one drenched in realism) of intimacy and illusion, possession and a terrible, destructive snobbery. On one estate outside London, even as the Great War and familial loss are taking their toll, the inhabitants strive for a measured, outwardly exquisite existence. All must remain as it was while their Chris is at war: each person, each object in its proper place. “You probably know the beauty of that view,” the narrator buttonholes us, looking out the nursery window:
For when Chris rebuilt Baldry Court after his marriage, he handed it over to architects who had not so much the wild eye of the artist as the knowing wink of the manicurist, and between them they massaged the dear old place into matter for innumerable photos in the illustrated papers.
But of late this universe unto itself cannot quite keep out an England altered by ambition and industry. Only a few miles away a “red suburban stain,” Wealdstone, has somehow cropped up. And one day all is permanently altered–or, rather, revealed–when a Wealdstone resident comes bearing news of Captain Baldry. Mrs. William Gray is clearly not of Chris’s wife Kitty and his cousin Jenny’s class, as Kitty in particular makes her aware. “Again her gray eyes brimmed,” Jenny observes. “People are rude to one, she visibly said, but surely not nice people like this.” How is it, then, that this dreary, “dingy” woman knows Chris and knows that something has happened to him? And how is it that Jenny soon comes to see her as someone “whose personality was sounding through her squalor like a beautiful voice singing in a darkened room”?
In the remainder of this brief, perfect novel, a vanished (or repressed) past and its lost prospect of happiness comes to the fore. Rebecca West is best remembered for Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey Through Yugoslavia (1941), but she displays the same vision–and a similar degree of realism–in her charged 1916 novel. Many readers will passionately regret the book’s last twist, even as they know it to be artistically as well as historically true. –Kerry Fried
Review
“Brilliant . . . [West was] an artist who wrote wonderful prose, who took chances with language and cadence, and who wrote poetically, even of prosaic subjects.
”—
The New Republic
From the Back Cover
World War I, in the background of Rebecca West’s first novel, was “the first war that women could imagine”, writes Samuel Hynes in his eloquent introduction, “and so it was the first that a woman could write into a novel”. Narrated by a woman who, like West, has never experienced war and yet for whom the war was very real, The Return of the Soldier (1918) takes place not on a battlefield, but in an isolated country house. It examines the relationships between three women and a soldier suffering from shell shock. This novel of an e