Pages: (Audio CD) ISBN: 1904605583 Pub: CSA WORD Pub date: 2006-02-13 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 101693
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Reader Reviews:Not his best and not very good in its genre either (0/0 people found this helpful)From the same author I had read and liked "A Handful of Dust" and "Brideshead", two "serious" books, the latter made extremely famous by the mini-series starring Jeremy Irons. "Decline and Fall" belongs to the category of (slapstick?) comedy. I don't think it is a success as such though. It is plagued by flaws typical of first novels. Lack of momentum: each chapter seems to begin the story anew rather than take over when the preceding one left. Many characters (students and teachers) are not well individualised and socially unconvincing. Most importantly, much dialogue is redundant and leads nowhere: in a novel dialogue should either help the story forward or contain witticisms; when it does neither it should be curtailed. I should say that my judgement was probably made more exacting by the fact that I read this book after reading one of Waugh's contemporary and friend: Anthony Powell. I now realise that the latter deals with a similar subject matter a much more compelling way. Waugh At His Best (0/0 people found this helpful)"Oh I shouldn't try to teach them anything yet"
The easiest 'classic' I've read in years (0/1 people found this helpful)Great fun and a remarkably quick read. I agree with other reviewers that some of the coincidences in the narrative are a little hard to stomach - at least until one realises that it's to do with the style of the book. Waugh's satire is so naturalistic that things like that stick out - but they're meant to; partly to themselves satirise the 'everybody knows everybody' attitude of the English upper classes at the time.
Best-ever Waugh (2/3 people found this helpful)I must have read this ten times, and I'm not done yet. Every time you find something new, something you missed the time before A marvellous introduction (3/6 people found this helpful)My first Evelyn Waugh book, and I was desperately sad when it finished that I bought the remainder of his oeuvre. Poor Paul Pennyfeather. Every second of the book is a joy to read, and if only we had Waugh's style among us now.
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Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> W -> Waugh, Evelyn
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