The Blaze of Noon

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  • New Paperback | 224 pp.
  • ISBN: 9781847492029
  • Published: 2011

£11.99  £9.59
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When the blind narrator, the masseur Louis Dunkel, moves into the Cornwall country house of his patient Mrs Nance, he becomes fascinated by her niece Sophie, a haughty young woman. Their resulting romance, however, is unsettled by the arrival of the blind, deaf and dumb Amity Nance. The introspective Dunkel tries to interpret and negotiate the pitfalls of a difficult and at times hostile environment.

Written in a subtle, elegant prose which adroitly embraces the impossibility of visual description, The Blaze of Noon, a rediscovered classic first published in 1939, addresses issues of psychology and perception, whilst pioneering, in the eyes of various critics, avant-garde narrative techniques which were later adopted by the Nouveau Roman school among others.

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'It will not date. It is written more like a novel one might imagine being written in ten or even twenty years hence. We may all be more European by then.' Elizabeth Bowen

'An infallible resource to anyone writing a history of the interwar avant-garde.' TLS

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Rayner Heppenstall (1911–81) was a poet, novelist, journalist, translator and broadcaster. He is remembered as a forerunner of the Nouveau Roman and a spiritual forefather to the neomodernist circle headed by B. S. Johnson in 1960s Britain.


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