A Room with a View by E.M. Forster - ISBN: 9780679724766
Paperback
Passion blooms in Italy; can love conquer English society’s rules?

A Room with a View

$28.83

  • Paperback

    256 pages

  • Release Date

    15 October 2009

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Summary

One of E.M. Forster’s earliest and most celebrated works. This Edwardian social comedy explores love and prim propriety among an eccentric cast of characters assembled in an Italian pensione and in a corner of Surrey, England. A charming young English woman, Lucy Honeychurch, faints into the arms of a fellow Britisher when she witnesses a murder in a Florentine piazza. Attracted to this man, George Emerson - who is entirely unsuitable and whose father just may be a Socialist - Lucy is soon at…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780679724766
ISBN-10:0679724761
Author:E.M. Forster
Publisher:Random House USA Inc
Imprint:Vintage Books
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:256
Release Date:15 October 2009
Weight:210g
Dimensions:203mm x 132mm x 17mm
Series:Vintage Classics
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About The Author

E.M. Forster

Edward Morgan Forster was born in London in 1879, attended Tonbridge School as a day boy, and went on to King’s College, Cambridge, in 1897. With King’s he had a lifelong connection and was elected to an Honorary Fellowship in 1946. He declared that his life as a whole had not been dramatic, and he was unfailingly modest about his achievements. Interviewed by the BBC on his eightieth birthday, he said- ‘I have not written as much as I’d like to… I write for two reasons- partly to make money and partly to win the respect of people whom I respect… I had better add that I am quite sure I am not a great novelist.’ Eminent critics and the general public have judged otherwise and in his obituary The Times called him ‘one of the most esteemed English novelists of his time’.

He wrote six novels, four of which appeared before the First World War, Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905), The Longest Journey (1907), A Room with a View (1908), and Howard’s End (1910). An interval of fourteen years elapsed before he published A Passage to India. It won both the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Maurice, his novel on a homosexual theme, finished in 1914, was published posthumously in 1971. He also published two volumes of short stories; two collections of essays; a critical work, Aspects of the Novel; The Hill of Devi, a fascinating record of two visits Forster made to the Indian State of Dewas Senior; two biographies; two books about Alexandria (where he worked for the Red Cross in the First World War); and, with Eric Crozier, the libretto for Britten’s opera Billy Budd. He died in June 1970.

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