The loved one by evelyn waugh5/26/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() He has concentrated his heaviest fire upon the mortuary business. Waugh has left some fairly deep wounds in the much-scarred flanks of the movie business and has paid particularly discourteous respects to the British celluloid colony (pukka sahibs bravely maintaining imperial prestige among the barbarians), They aren’t that important or as representative (we hope!) as he thinks they are.Īlthough Mr. The excesses he mocks hardly deserve so obliterating an attack. But somehow he leaves the impression that he has fixed a sixteen-inch gun broadside at a target which could have been disabled as well withĪ harpoon. Waugh has never written more brilliantly. Ghoulish and its hyena laughter snarls obscenely. “The Loved One” is not a book which the squeamish or queasy of stomachs could face with composure. Rarely in fiction have such execrably bad taste and such cruel wit been combined in one short satirical novel. Not wasted, for he reacted with more than the customary violence to the horrors of civilization in Southern California, and he has written a thoroughly horrible and fiendishly entertaining book about it, “The Loved One.” Nothing much came from his labors but Mr. His satirical-religious novel, “Brideshead Revisited,” for MGM, hardly a sinecure if he was to please both the movie moguls and his own artistic conscience. He was supposed to prepare a screen adaptation of ![]() Ot so very long ago Evelyn Waugh spent what must have been an unhappy sojourn in Hollywood. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |