
Picture of Nobody
$35.35
- Paperback
288 pages
- Release Date
14 July 2026
Summary
Transposed into the early twentieth century, a nonentity named Shakespeare rails against poverty, mediocrity, and misunderstanding, in forgotten modernist Philip Owens’s brilliant, one-of-a-kind satire.
Every year, there’s a new crop of sad, dirty poet boys coming up to the city without a penny to their names. In six months’ time, who on earth will remember these nobodies, with their so-called blank verse and their extravagant plots-this Marlowe, Kyd, and Will “Shakes…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781961341883 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1961341883 |
| Author: | Philip Owens, Allen Bratton |
| Publisher: | McNally Jackson Books |
| Imprint: | McNally Jackson Books |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 288 |
| Release Date: | 14 July 2026 |
| Dimensions: | 215mm x 127mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
“Picture of Nobody is truly unlike any other book I have read. Shakespeare and AntiShakespeare, a time-slipping tragicomedy of errors, grim and gorgeous, sparkling and sliding with wit and melancholy, a confusion triumphant, with some shady Beasts at the Doors. Its idiosyncrasy—and its rarity—have left it unread and unrecognised, and its author’s early death in WWII meant nothing else was to come from him. Picture of Nobody is a masterpiece, and a very strange one too.”
—David Tibet
“Mr. Owens overloads his page with an Elizabethan generosity. He has felt love and pain and beauty. He burns with a fine anger. At a time when so much unadventurous competence comes from the presses, this uncompromising, passionate voice should be heard with respect.”—L.A.G. Strong
“Picture of Nobody is a witty, audacious reimagining of Shakespeare in 1930s London, written with great brio and panache. It conveys a lot about Shakespeare and his contemporaries in an original and inventive way, and also gives a dramatic picture of interwar turmoil. This remarkable work richly deserves rediscovery.”—Mark Valentine
“Picture of Nobody has a fun premise, transposing the figure of William Shakespeare to (then-)contemporary (i.e. 1930s) London and showing how the talented writer might fare … Owens doesn’t just have writers of this and that day change places, with literary-historical play that also extends to and includes wordplay, making for multiple levels of entertaining meaning … As clever as the conceit of the novel is, it’s also the style that is particularly striking … An impressive and often very funny piece of work.”—M. A. Orthofer, Complete Review
“A brilliant idea! … His purpose, apart from entertaining himself and us, is to expose the greater vulgarity of our day: and this he does with a ferocity and satiric anger which is extremely enjoyable.”—London Daily News
“A fantastic affair in which a reincarnated Shakespeare with some of his contemporaries is found battling against twentieth-century odds … It is a brave and stimulating business, the kind of queer story which persistently remains in your mind … A provocative and whimsical story which deserves serious attention.”—Ralph Straus, The Sunday Times
“The characters here are mediocre and that’s what makes this novel so great. The satirized life of a struggling poet is laugh-out-loud funny and at the same time shows how little has changed for everyday, unglamorous writers since this book’s initial publication 90 years ago. Picture of Nobody delivers and Owens, despite his flawed characters, is certainly no chump himself.”——Clarisse Jorah, Literati Bookstore (Ann Arbor, MI)
“Fresh and original.”—Time & Tide
“A very amusing and witty jeu d’esprit … Mr. Owens is an original writer and his first novel can be warmly recommended.”—A. G. Macdonell, The Observer
“The book is brilliant … Mr. Owens is a gifted and fiery writer; there are many ways of making one’s debut, and this which he has chosen—one might describe it as swallowing a crocodile—will anyhow give him a pleasant insouciance for his next attempt.”—The Manchester Guardian
“It is quite unusually vivid both in irony and in genuine feeling; it has a good deal of humour and is arresting because of its sincerity … one can have no doubts about what the author means to say, nor that he says it well and with originality.”—The Times
About The Author
Philip Owens
Philip Owens (1900–1945) was a poet, translator, and editor. He published one novella, Hobohemians, in 1929, as well as several verse plays and poems over the succeeding decade. He translated two novels by Hans Fallada, and his poetry appears in the 1930 Samuel Putnam-edited anthology European Caravan, which also introduced the world to Samuel Beckett and William Empson. In the penultimate year of his life, Owens edited the collection Bed and Sometimes Breakfast: An Anthology of Landladies (1944). He died in an accident in Greece—where he was serving with British Intelligence—just three months before the end of the Second World War.
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