4 books by Wilson Harris
Requirements: ePUB / MOBI Reader, 2.9 mb
Overview: Sir Theodore Wilson Harris (born 24 March 1921) is a Guyanese writer. He initially wrote poetry, but has since become a well-known novelist and essayist. His writing style is often said to be abstract and densely metaphorical, and his subject matter wide-ranging. Harris is considered one of the most original and innovative voices in postwar literature in English.
Genre: Literary Fiction
Companions of the Day and Night: In Companions of the Day and Night (first published in 1975) Wilson Harris revives figures from his earlier Black Marsden – chiefly Clive Goodrich, the ‘editor’ of this text, who constructs a narrative from the papers of a figure known as Idiot Nameless: a wanderer between present and past, taking an Easter sojourn in Mexico that lasts both for days and for centuries. The results have the strangely hypnotic power characteristic of Wilson Harris’s fiction.
Black Marsden: Wilson Harris’s tenth novel, first published in 1972, is set in Edinburgh but, like much of his subsequent work, bridges continents by its imaginative reach.
The Angel at the Gate: First published in 1982, The Angel at the Gate is offered to readers as Wilson Harris’s analysis and interpretation of the ‘automatic writing’ of ‘Mary Stella Holiday’: an assumed name for the secretary and patient of the late Father Joseph Marsden.
The Waiting Room: When the Forrestals died in an explosion that wrecked their home and destroyed most of its contents, there survived a disjointed diary — or ‘log book’, as Susan Forrestal called it. She had suffered from an affliction of the eyes which, after three operations, left her almost blind.
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