Dark Palace Frank Moorhouse 9780330485463 Books
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Dark Palace Frank Moorhouse 9780330485463 Books
Frank Moorhouse - Dark PalaceThis is the second novel in the ‘Edith Trilogy’ by Frank Moorhouse, and I enjoyed it even more than the first novel, 'Grand Days', and I was captured by that one from page one to the finish.
I am fascinated by the life and character of Edith Campbell Berry, who is an Australian working in high office in the League of Nations, in Geneva, in the 1920’s and 30’s. And other characters in this series of novels - some real people and some fictitious - are also well developed and with fascinating personal and public lives.
I admire Frank Moorhouse’s research of the real history of this time and his incorporating its well-known historical figures and the significant world events into the story, as well as developing fascinating and sometimes Bohemian aspects into this dangerous time in world history, with World War II threatening.
I have always had a fascination with this period in history, and in particular with the ‘left-wing’, ‘free-spirited’ creative people of that era, and this novel takes me right into that world. I loved every page.
Now to the third and final novel in the trilogy, “Cold Light”.
Tags : Dark Palace [Frank Moorhouse] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. * A brilliant depiction of life, love and politics between the two World Wars by the author of GRAND DAYS * 'Moorhouse transcends nationality,Frank Moorhouse,Dark Palace,Picador,0330485466,Fiction,Social aspects,World War, 1939-1945,Modern fiction,Fiction General,General & Literary Fiction,Modern & contemporary fiction,Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
Dark Palace Frank Moorhouse 9780330485463 Books Reviews
Great characters, real history and another good read. Brings a long gone world to life. Read this straight after Grand days.
This book follows the story of Edith Campbell Berry, and the collapse of the League of Nations as Europe moves closer to the war. Edith's marriage has failed and she once again moves into a close relationship with Ambrose, her 'nancy-boy'..
Frank Moorhouse's intensive research into the history of this period has resulted in a fascinating insight into the influential characters in the League, the reasons for it's failure and the impact of the rise of Nazi Germany on the bohemian and artistic population of Geneva.
The story concludes on a despondent note with the failure of the surviving delegates of the League to be admitted to the conference in San Fransisco of the newly formed United Nations, and their feeling that their work was to no avail.
In Edith Campbell Berry, Frank Moorehouse as created an iconic Australian woman. As she develops in this the second book of the trilogy, she maintains an internal consistency while leaving behind some of her idealism. Beautifully written and full of historical insight about the League of Nations, Dark Palace is joy to read.
With the author's Grand Days and Shirley Hazzard's People in Glass Houses, Dark Palace completes a trilogy on international organizations which is essential reading for anyone contemplating a career at the UN or similar entity.
Once again we meet Edith Berry, older now and smarter, but no wiser in her private life. It says a great deal for the author that the main character never wears out her welcome after two volumes and 1000 pages of wrong headedness. The League of Nations is once again shown in all its ineffectual, bureaucratic glory. Mr. Moorhouse has carefully researched the League and this book, and Grand Days, gives us as accurate a feel for the place as we'll ever get. A long interlude in Australia in the middle of the book illustrates how Edith has lost her Australian identity without quite finding a new one.
One humorous note is the conviction among the characters that if the US joins, then collective security will succeed. But if collective security is dependent on a single country, then it is not collective, nor is it secure.
The book ends with an painfully accurate depiction of the humiliation the League suffers in the San Francisco Conference establishing the United Nations, a humiliation dictated by the Soviet Union with the help of complacent Westerners and the spy Alger Hiss. It is painful to witness these scenes and you hope to run across Edith Berry in some future and more successful endeavor.
Frank Moorhouse - Dark Palace
This is the second novel in the ‘Edith Trilogy’ by Frank Moorhouse, and I enjoyed it even more than the first novel, 'Grand Days', and I was captured by that one from page one to the finish.
I am fascinated by the life and character of Edith Campbell Berry, who is an Australian working in high office in the League of Nations, in Geneva, in the 1920’s and 30’s. And other characters in this series of novels - some real people and some fictitious - are also well developed and with fascinating personal and public lives.
I admire Frank Moorhouse’s research of the real history of this time and his incorporating its well-known historical figures and the significant world events into the story, as well as developing fascinating and sometimes Bohemian aspects into this dangerous time in world history, with World War II threatening.
I have always had a fascination with this period in history, and in particular with the ‘left-wing’, ‘free-spirited’ creative people of that era, and this novel takes me right into that world. I loved every page.
Now to the third and final novel in the trilogy, “Cold Light”.
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