The Apes of God

by Wyndham Lewis

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ThingScore 50
The Apes of God can be read for one or two fine broad scenes of libel — the dinner party with the Finnish poet bawling his French verse - and for its general blood bath in the literary society of the Twenties. Its fatal limitation is triviality of subject; it was topical to attack the cult of art, but there is a whiff of provinciality about the odd man out. Exciting sentence by sentence, show more image by image, it is all too much page by page. The note of sanity is excellent, but sanity that protests too much becomes itself a kind of madness. show less
V.S. Pritchett, New Statesman
added by SnootyBaronet
The Apes of God is certainly a great book, one of the monumental satires of our day, and it deals with events and issues of great importance. It also goes out of its way to pay off specific grudges against various denizens of Bloomsbury, Chelsea, and Charlotte Street. It ends with an extremely specific attack on the Sitwells. It is all very entertaining, but it is rather too monumental and you show more miss much of the fun if you don’t know the people. show less
Kenneth Rexroth, The Nation
added by SnootyBaronet
Satire should (pardon the pun) be swift, and The Apes of God—all 650 pages of it in the recently published Penguin edition*—merely shambles along. The impression of extreme slowness derives from the careful brushwork, but we should be looking at the results of this, not be asked to admire the process. It is the time and the paint that Lewis gives us, not the instantaneous image dredged out show more of time; we're borne along—by a dreadful irony—in a flux that's near-frozen...

For all these strictures, The Apes of God ought to be read, if not all through (life being short). The big indigestible prose draws on a vast vocabulary and can be precise if not concise; it is also the idiosyncratic garment of a great, if pig- and wrong-headed, British personality. The visual concentration is a fine corrective in an age of careless and perfunctory description. It is no bad thing to send young novelists to art-class or to set them to the reading of exhibition catalogues—a useful part of their training, though it should not be the whole of their life. But, as a satirical novel, The Apes of God is an awe-inspiring failure.
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Anthony Burgess, Observer
added by SnootyBaronet

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Author Information

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91+ Works 2,920 Members
Wydham Lewis: November 18, 1882 -- March 7, 1957 Distinguished and highly original, Wyndham Lewis was known for his sharp wit and sardonic insight. A modern master of satire, Lewis was born off the coast of Nova Scotia in his English father's yacht on November 18, 1882, and grew up in England with his mother. He was associated with Roger Fry and show more Ezra Pound on the vorticist magazine, Blast (1914--1915). Lewis served in France in World War I, and his dynamic paintings of war scenes soon gained him wide recognition for his art, now represented in the Tate Gallery and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and in the Museum of Modern Art, New York. After the publication of his naturalistic novel Tarr (1918), he became prominent as a writer. His major work of fiction is The Human Age (1955--56). He also wrote Doom of Youth, The Hitler Cult, and The Jews, Are They Human? Lewis died in London on March 7, 1957. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1930
First words
OH DEAR MABEL!
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)In the great reception-room immediately beneath Archie Margolin, as he heard the first notes of the street-instrumentalists, stiffened, and, with elf-like nigger-bottom-wagging, he traversed the oppressive spaces of this monster apartment—built for victorian ‘ giants ’ in their first flower—smiling at himself as he advanced (with his St. Vitus puppet-shiver) in the mighty victorian looking-glasses.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.912Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991901-1945
LCC
PR6023 .E97 .A85Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1900-1960
BISAC

Statistics

Members
346
Popularity
90,575
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (3.38)
Languages
English, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
9