The Unspeakable Skipton
Pamela Hansford Johnson
Belletristik/Erzählende Literatur
Beschreibung
It’s not easy being a genius. Just ask Daniel Skipton, the greatest—or, let us say, the most under-recognized—novelist of his generation. Skipton is only a few revisions away from finishing his masterpiece: a satire of literary London that will humiliate his enemies and make him as famous, and as rich, as he deserves. Yet, in the meantime, he is forced to scrape by in obscurity and self-imposed exile amid the deserted canals of Bruges, barely surviving on a regimen of blackmail, bullying, persistence, and native charm.
One afternoon at a local cafe, he encounters the acclaimed playwright Dorothy Merlin and her entourage—worldly tourists on the lookout for erotic adventure and in need of a local guide. Soon they are joined by an even juicier target, a Venetian count who dreams of singing on the English stage and who will spend anything to make his dream come true. Or so he leads Skipton to believe.
Too long out of print in the U.S.,
The Unspeakable Skipton belongs on the shelf beside the best work of Nancy Mitford or Muriel Spark. As Michael Dirda writes in his foreword, it is “a dark chocolate treat, deliciously witty and bittersweet.”
Kundenbewertungen
con artist, Dorothy Merlin, Muriel Spark, antihero, A Confederacy of Dunces, CP Snow, Dylan Thomas, best Satires, Mitford, novels about writers, Baron Corvo, Forgery, Bruges, Evelyn Waugh, blackmail, Rolfe, British authors, Anthony Burgess, Wilde, Pimps, the Debt to Pleasure, Black comedy