Book Cover
Book
Author Stead, C. K. (Christian Karlson), 1932-

Title The secret history of modernism / C.K. Stead
Published London : Harvill Press, 2001

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  828.02 S7992 A6/Se  AVAILABLE
Description 230 pages ; 22 cm
Contents Ch. 1. Hitler's Nose -- ch. 2. T.S. Eliot's Rose Garden -- ch. 3. Concerning Sammy -- ch. 4. And then there was Margot -- ch. 5. An Encounter in Russell Square -- ch. 6. Jack and Jill -- ch. 7. The Goldstein Story -- ch. 8. Learning and Teaching -- ch. 9. Old Rose and Old Reds -- ch. 10. The Goldstein Story -- 2 -- ch. 11. The Wind in the Willows -- ch. 12. Only Connect -- ch. 13. I Smell the Blood of an Englishman -- ch. 14. The Goldstein Story -- 3 -- ch. 15. "It was You, Laszlo. It was You." -- ch. 16. "Not to Forget my History" -- ch. 17. The Secret History of Modernism
Summary "A chance meeting has New Zealand writer Laszlo Winter thinking back to his time in London in the late 1950s. The Empire might be in a state of collapse, but for young "colonials", England remains a mythical place that draws them from the farthest corners of the globe." "There was Australian Samantha Conlan, clever, desirable, hopelessly in love with married Jewish New Zealander Freddy Goldstein, who carried with him a dark history. Rajiv, earnest young Indian at work on a study of Yeats and the deeps of the Indian mind. The enigmatic Margot, whose bond with her athletic brother Mark troubled Laszlo in ways he didn't quite understand. Heather, the call girl with whom Laszlo exchanged lessons in Shakespeare for lessons in love. Maltese Mr Spitfire and How Repulsive the fishmonger who shared Laszlo's digs. The great writers of the time, and the details of their lives recorded by Samantha in her idiosyncratic research project that she named her Secret History of Modernism. There was all of that, and more - and there was Laszlo, knocking blindly about among them in that far-distant past that was London before the 1960s, despairing at his academic prospects, and gradually realising that he was, would only ever be, a storyteller." "Now, years later, from the other side of the world, from the other side of the millennium, the people seem to spring to life again. But the truth of what became of them, and how much is the fabric of fiction, only Laszlo can know, and the reader can guess at, in this beguiling new work by one of New Zealand's foremost writers."--BOOK JACKET
Notes New Zealand author
Cover subtitle: A novel
Also issued online
Subject Authors, New Zealand -- 20th century.
Authors, New Zealand -- 20th century -- Fiction.
New Zealanders -- England -- London -- Fiction.
SUBJECT London (England) -- Fiction. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008106611
Genre/Form New Zealand fiction
Bildungsromans.
New Zealand fiction
New Zealand fiction.
Bildungsromans.
Novels.
LC no. 2002421399
ISBN 1860469310
1860469418 paperback