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Sea and Sardinia by D. H. Lawrence
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Sea and Sardinia (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of D. H. Lawrence)

by D. H. Lawrence

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Cambridge University Press (1997), Edition: New edition, Hardcover, 281 pages

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DH Lawrence travelling Sardinia making crude judgements about people. At first I didn't like this at all. Even though I tried to mentalize the 1925 way of thought and appreciate the language of aknowledge horizon different from the current one, I found the screaming racism too much and the endless descriptions too alien to what I'm cultured to. And even though at times well writen in a very flowery language, there were - to me - boring sections throughout the book. What makes it readable though, is the descriptions of a folk life that just isn't possible anymore. As Lawrence and his woman travel towns and villages on Sardinia the account of extremely local clothing- and food styles become more and more elaborate. I do not have enough knowledge of early 20th century Italy to know about the accuracy of Lawrences account, but assume that he is not making it entirely up, and find the concept of varying cultures inside such a small area fascinating. It's worth the read if only for that. ( )
  ekebivibeke | Sep 1, 2009 |
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D. H. Lawrence

Sea and Sardinia

The Cambridge Edition of the Letters and Works of D. H. Lawrence

Book description

Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0141180765, Paperback)

An authoritative edition of "the most charming book Lawrence ever wrote" (Anthony Burgess)

In January 1921, D. H. Lawrence and his wife, Frieda visited Sardinia, a Mediterranean island west of Italy. Although the trip lasted only nine days, Lawrence wrote an intriguing account of Sardinian life that not only evokes the place, people, and local customs but is also deeply revealing about the writer himself.

Remarkable for its metaphoric and symbolic descriptions, the book is transfused with the author's anger and joy. His prejudices and his political prophecies make Sea and Sardinia a unique and dynamic piece of travel writing. This Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics edition reproduces the Cambridge text, which restores censored passages and corrects corrupt textual readings to reveal--for the first time--the book Lawrence himself called "a marvel of veracity." Also featured are an illuminating Introduction by Lawrence scholar Mara Kalnins, a Chronology, Explanatory Notes, and an Italian Glossary.

"A wonderful book . . . no one who has really thrilled to Lawrence can ever give him up."--Philip Larkin

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:00 -0400)

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