Included here are poems about the tie to the mother, about Miriam, about the trauma of the mother's lingering mortal illness, and about the poignant aftermath of her death during which the son suffered self-abandonment to grief and a sense of desolation described in the novel as a nuit blanche or 'w ...
More
D. H. Lawrence's THE RAINBOW, declared obscene when it was published in 1915, is the passionately written chronicle of three generations of a Nottingham farming family. Tom Brangwen marries a widow named Lydia Lensky; Lydia's daughter Anna marries her cousin Will, a woodcarver, and has a large famil ...
More
Now available for the first time as a trade paperback, QUETZALCOATL is the original 1923 version of D.H. Lawrence's great Mexican novel, THE PLUMED SERPENT--especially noted for its vivid evocation of Mexican culture and mythology, intensity of feeling, and psychological insight. This edition includ ...
More
Lyric and sensual, D.H. Lawrences last novel is one of the major works of fiction of the twentieth century. Filled with scenes of intimate beauty, explores the emotions of a lonely woman trapped in a sterile marriage and her growing love for the robust gamekeeper of her husbands estate. The mos ...
More