Eustace and Hilda: A Trilogy (New York Review Books Classics)

by L.P. Hartley

Paperback, 2001

Status

Available

Call number

823.912

Collection

Publication

NYRB Classics (2001), Paperback, 758 pages

Description

The three books gathered together as Eustace and Hilda explore a brother and sister's lifelong relationship. Hilda, the older child, is both self-sacrificing and domineering, as puritanical as she is gorgeous; Eustace is a gentle, dreamy, pleasure-loving boy: the two siblings could hardly be more different, but they are also deeply devoted. And yet as Eustace and Hilda grow up and seek to go their separate ways in a world of power and position, money and love, their relationship is marked by increasing pain. L. P. Hartley's much-loved novel, the magnum opus of one of twentieth-century England's best writers, is a complex and spellbinding work: a comedy of upper-class manners; a study in the subtlest nuances of feeling; a poignant reckoning with the ironies of character and fate. Above all, it is about two people who cannot live together or apart, about the ties that bind--and break.… (more)

Language

Physical description

876 p.; 7.94 inches

ISBN

0940322803 / 9780940322806

Local notes

omnibus
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