Death Dance: Twenty-Five Stories
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
Condition remarks: Tears along folds of jacket.
A masterwork of mid-twentieth-century British short fiction, Death Dance: Twenty-Five Stories gathers a carefully curated selection of tales from one of postwar England's most incisive literary voices, presenting a sharp, satirical portrait of English society in all its pretension, anxiety, and quiet desperation. With a tone that balances dark wit with psychological acuity, the collection chronicles the lives of characters trapped by class, convention, and self-deception — academics, socialites, and suburbanites alike caught in the intricate choreography of social performance that gives the volume its evocative title. Wilson illustrates with devastating precision how the veneer of respectability conceals loneliness, cruelty, and moral compromise, rendering even minor social encounters as charged and revealing as any grand drama. The prose is elegant yet unsettling, drawing on Wilson's background as a literary critic to craft narratives that reward close reading and linger long after the final page. Readers who appreciate the tradition of Evelyn Waugh or E.M. Forster will find in this collection a writer of comparable intelligence and considerably darker sensibility.
Author: Angus Wilson
Format: Hardback
Published: 1969, The Viking Press
Genre: Anthology
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
Condition remarks: Tears along folds of jacket.
A masterwork of mid-twentieth-century British short fiction, Death Dance: Twenty-Five Stories gathers a carefully curated selection of tales from one of postwar England's most incisive literary voices, presenting a sharp, satirical portrait of English society in all its pretension, anxiety, and quiet desperation. With a tone that balances dark wit with psychological acuity, the collection chronicles the lives of characters trapped by class, convention, and self-deception — academics, socialites, and suburbanites alike caught in the intricate choreography of social performance that gives the volume its evocative title. Wilson illustrates with devastating precision how the veneer of respectability conceals loneliness, cruelty, and moral compromise, rendering even minor social encounters as charged and revealing as any grand drama. The prose is elegant yet unsettling, drawing on Wilson's background as a literary critic to craft narratives that reward close reading and linger long after the final page. Readers who appreciate the tradition of Evelyn Waugh or E.M. Forster will find in this collection a writer of comparable intelligence and considerably darker sensibility.