A Desolate Splendor

A Desolate Splendor
Author: Jantunen, John
Publisher: ECW Press
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2016-10-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1770908994

A chilling portrait of a familyæfighting to preserve their humanity in a cruel and merciless world The collapse of civilization has left the survivors scattered amongst a few settlements along the wilderness fringe of a land ravaged by war. Preyed upon by roving bands of sadistic ex-soldiers and ever at the mercy of a natural world that has turned against them, a family is facing their final days. Hope appears in the guise of their young son. Raised in isolation and taught by his father to survive at any cost, he is thrust headlong into a battle for the future of humankind after rescuing a girl fleeing from a savage and relentless cult bent on burning the world back to Eden. Raw and unflinching, A Desolate Splendoræweaves a stark, and eerily familiar, portrayal of life on the brink of extinction and heralds the rise of an exciting new voice in apocalyptic fiction.

The Spectator

The Spectator
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1150
Release: 1923
Genre: English literature
ISBN:

A weekly review of politics, literature, theology, and art.

Lawrence, Greene and Lowry

Lawrence, Greene and Lowry
Author: Douglas Veitch
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2006-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0889205701

When writers go on journeys it is as often to explore the terra incognita of their own selves as to establish the identities of strange lands; in the case of many English novelists between the great wars it was certainly true, as Douglas Veitch remarks in the study I am introducing, that their work, "even as it essayed the exotic, cast an eye homeward and inward", and that they "roamed the world, seeking surcease from a prevailing malaise which doubted the values of Western Civilization." ... Mr. Veitch has taken this vital element in the three novels--The Plumed Serpent, The Power and the Glory and Under The Volcano--and has used it not merely to examine these works themselves but also to sketch out the ambivalent role which landscape plays in all fiction, as omnipresent background but also as a rich source of symbols and images reflecting the human drama which a book develops. He has, as he more than once makes clear, done more than read all the relevant literature; he has himself travelled to Mexico in order to see and experience the extraordinary terrain, and, as I can vouch on the basis of my own knowledge of that infinitely attractive and repellent country, he used his senses well while he was there. --from the Introduction by George Woodcock

The Yale Review

The Yale Review
Author: George Park Fisher
Publisher:
Total Pages: 962
Release: 1923
Genre: American literature
ISBN: