Wolf Solent
Beschreibung des Verlags
We rely on your support to help us keep producing beautiful, free, and unrestricted editions of literature for the digital age. Will you support our efforts with a donation ? Wolf Solent is the first of four Wessex novels by John Cowper Powys , based on a fictionalized southwest England in the pattern of Thomas Hardy . The titular character, after having a mental breakdown, loses his job and travels to the small town of Ramsgard to do literary work for a local squire. There he becomes involved with two women: Gerda who is simple and in tune with nature, and Christie, who is more complex and intellectual. The novel is very introspective. We watch Wolf's inner thoughts as he tries to make sense of his secret "mythology" or "life-illusion," based on his idea of an internal battle of good versus evil. As various buried secrets emerge, some involving his own family, Wolf tries to navigate his relationships and questions his own impulses, feeling that the survival of his "life-illusion" is at stake. The novel was very well received on publication, and is considered a literary masterpiece despite its curious lack of renown. Author Simon Heffer called Wolf Solent "the finest novel by an Englishman in the 20th century." John Cowper Powys (died 1963) was a significant literary figure of the 20th century. Their work has endured across generations and continues to be read and studied worldwide. As a work of classic literary fiction, Wolf Solent exemplifies the narrative craft and social insight that defined great storytelling of its era. Literary fiction of this period was characterized by careful attention to character psychology, social milieu, and the moral questions that animated public discourse.