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Chesterton, G.K. : The Man Who Was Thursday
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Series: Wordsworth Classics.
Perhaps best known to the general public as creator of the "Father Brown" detective stories, G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936) was especially renowned for his wit, rhetorical brilliance and talent for ingenious and revealing paradox. Those qualities are richly brilliant in the present volume, a hilarious, fast-paced tale about a club of anarchists in turn-of-the-century London. The story begins when Gabriel Syme, a poet and member of a special group of philosophical policemen, attends a secret meeting of anarchists, whose leaders are named for the days of the week, and all of whom are sworn to destroy the world. Their chief is the mysterious Sunday - huge, boisterous, full of vitality, a wild personage who may be a Chestertonian vision of God or nature or both. When Syme, actually an undercover detective, is unexpectedly elected to fill a vacancy on the anarchists' Central Council, the plot takes the first of many surprising twists and turns.
condition: | |
category: | Books > Foreign Language Books > Books in English > Literature in English > |
publisher: | Wordsworth, 1995 |
item number / ISBN: | 9781853262364 |
binding: | paperback (in original dust jacket) |
pages: | 145 |
language: | English |