Aaron’s Rod
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- USD 1.99
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- USD 1.99
Descripción editorial
Aaron’s Rod is one of D. H. Lawrence’s most intriguing and restless novels: a story of escape, desire, disillusionment, and the search for personal freedom.
Aaron Sisson, a miner and amateur flautist, abruptly abandons his wife, his children, and the suffocating routine of domestic life. Carrying only his flute — his symbolic “rod” — he sets out across post-war Europe, drawn by the promise of artistic independence and a new existence beyond social conventions. From England to Italy, Aaron encounters intellectuals, artists, and wanderers, each offering a different vision of life, love, and power.
Written in Lawrence’s intense and provocative style, the novel explores the conflict between individual will and human attachment, between masculine independence and emotional need, between the desire to belong and the urge to break free. Against the backdrop of a Europe shaken by war and uncertainty, Aaron’s Rod becomes a powerful meditation on modern alienation and the difficult pursuit of authenticity. Bold, psychological, and deeply personal, this is a novel that reveals Lawrence at his most searching: questioning marriage, society, art, and the fragile foundations of human relationships.
D. H. Lawrence (1885–1930) was an English novelist, poet, essayist, and literary critic, best known for his intense exploration of human emotions, sexuality, nature, and social conflict. Born in Nottinghamshire, he drew deeply on his working-class background and the tensions of modern industrial society. His major works include Sons and Lovers, The Rainbow, Women in Love, and Lady Chatterley’s Lover. Often controversial in his lifetime, Lawrence is now regarded as one of the most important and original voices of twentieth-century English literature.