John Galsworthy
Author
Formats
Description
The three novels which make up The Forsyte Saga chronicle the ebbing social power of the commerical upper-middle class Forsyte family between 1886 and 1920. This, the only critical edition of Galsworthy's popular masterpiece, contains detailed notes which are vital to the saga, explaining particularly the contemporary artistic and literary allusions, and slang of the time.
Author
Series
Publisher
Heritage Press
Pub. Date
[1964]
Description
The classic tale of a wealthy English family, and a jealous husband who will stop at nothing to gain dominion over his bride. The first installment of the critically acclaimed Forsyte Saga introduces the Forsyte clan and their endlessly fascinating intrigues. Author John Galsworthy's take on the constricted roles of women within the confines of marriage casts an unforgiving light on traditional courtship while rendering otherwise common domestic dramas...
Author
Publisher
Scribner's
Pub. Date
1926, c1923
Description
The Freelands, a novel by John Galsworthy, presents a rich tapestry of themes that resonate profoundly with contemporary societal issues. At its core, the novel explores the conflicts between tradition and progress, the struggle for personal freedom, and the complexities of familial relationships. Set against the backdrop of early 20th-century England, the story revolves around the lives of the Freeland family, who embody various ideological stances...
4) Swan song
Author
Series
Publisher
C. Scribner's sons
Pub. Date
1928
Description
The final novel of "a social satire of epic proportions and one that does not suffer by comparison with Thackeray's Vanity Fair" (The New York Times).
From the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1932
Set against the backdrop of a post–World War I Britain, now rocked by a general strike, Swan Song captures the staunch resilience-and ridiculousness-of the British upper middle class, who view this new national crisis as just a...
Author
Publisher
Scribner
Pub. Date
1927 [c1923]
Description
In the novel Saint's Progress, published in 1919, Galsworthy wrestles with issues of the Great War. What was really being fought for: love as the guiding principle of life, a balance between Might is Right and Right is Might or a basic belief in God?
Author
Publisher
C. Scribner's Sons
Pub. Date
[c1914]
Description
This 1914 drama follows a moral politician, Stephen More, as he watches his powerful country plan an attack on a small country. What's worse, his government is using trumped up charges in order to overtake and add the small country to their empire. More feels powerless as pressures from his family and parliament keep him quiet.
Author
Publisher
Scribner's
Pub. Date
1912
Description
This 1919 collection of Galsworthy's poems is true to its title, splitting into three sections: moods, songs, and doggerels. The volume contains over fifty poems, including "A Dream," "On a Soldier's Funeral," "Devon to Me!," "When Love if Young," "To My God," "Life?," and many others.
Author
Publisher
C. Scribner's sons
Pub. Date
1933
Description
Clare Charwell has just fled her sadistic husband in Ceylon and boarded a ship back to England. On the boat, she meets the charming Tony Croom, who falls madly in love with her. Though Clare's relationship with Tony is platonic, her husband has been secretly gathering “evidence” to accuse her of adultery.
Author
Publisher
C. Scribner's Sons
Pub. Date
1926
Description
The Silver Spoon is the fifth of the nine novels in the Forsyte Chronicles, John Galsworthy's epic story of the moneyed Forsyte family during the decline of the Victorian age. It is part of the second trilogy, called A Modern Comedy, and continues his fascinating study of the British propertied class in a changing society. In this novel, Soames Forsyte's daughter, Fleur, experiences an inherent dissatisfaction with her marriage not unlike her father's,...
10) Maid in waiting
Author
Series
Publisher
C. Scribner's Sons
Pub. Date
1931
Description
Maid in Waiting is the beginning novel in the last trilogy of John Galsworthy's Forsyte Chronicles. In this seventh installment, the story continues of the lives and times, loves and losses, fortunes and deaths of the fictional but entirely representative family of propertied Victorians, the Forsytes.
Author
Publisher
C. Scribner's sons
Pub. Date
1932
Description
John Galsworthy devoted virtually his entire professional career to creating a fictional but entirely representative family of propertied Victorians, the Forsytes. Flowering Wilderness is the eighth novel in his Forsyte Chronicles, which has become established as one of the most popular and enduring works of twentieth century literature.