Some Do Not ...
Softcover
Buy Now
By using these links, you support READO. We receive an affiliate commission without any additional costs to you.
Description
Some Do Not ... (1924), the first volume of Ford Madox Ford's Parade's End tetralogy, is a searching modernist anatomy of England before and during the First World War. Centered on Christopher Tietjens, a brilliant, archaically honorable civil servant trapped between a destructive marriage and a morally luminous love, the novel examines class, duty, sexuality, and national decline. Its fractured chronology, shifting perspectives, and subtle interiority place it beside the major experimental fiction of the period, while its ironic social comedy recalls the Edwardian novel it is also dismantling. Ford Madox Ford brought to the book a lifetime of literary innovation and personal dislocation. A collaborator of Conrad, editor of major modernist journals, and veteran of the Western Front, Ford understood both the technical demands of new fiction and the psychic ruptures caused by war. His own experience of military service, troubled relationships, and changing English institutions informs Tietjens's world with unusual authority. This novel is recommended to readers interested in modernism, war literature, and the collapse of old social certainties. Demanding yet deeply rewarding, it offers one of twentieth-century fiction's most intricate portraits of conscience under historical pressure.
Book Information
Main Genre
Novels
Sub Genre
Classics
Format
Softcover
Pages
180
Price
12.80 €
Description
Some Do Not ... (1924), the first volume of Ford Madox Ford's Parade's End tetralogy, is a searching modernist anatomy of England before and during the First World War. Centered on Christopher Tietjens, a brilliant, archaically honorable civil servant trapped between a destructive marriage and a morally luminous love, the novel examines class, duty, sexuality, and national decline. Its fractured chronology, shifting perspectives, and subtle interiority place it beside the major experimental fiction of the period, while its ironic social comedy recalls the Edwardian novel it is also dismantling. Ford Madox Ford brought to the book a lifetime of literary innovation and personal dislocation. A collaborator of Conrad, editor of major modernist journals, and veteran of the Western Front, Ford understood both the technical demands of new fiction and the psychic ruptures caused by war. His own experience of military service, troubled relationships, and changing English institutions informs Tietjens's world with unusual authority. This novel is recommended to readers interested in modernism, war literature, and the collapse of old social certainties. Demanding yet deeply rewarding, it offers one of twentieth-century fiction's most intricate portraits of conscience under historical pressure.
Book Information
Main Genre
Novels
Sub Genre
Classics
Format
Softcover
Pages
180
Price
12.80 €



