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A dazzling and devastating satire of the interwar years, Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh captures the glittering chaos of London's Bright Young Things-a generation dancing on the edge of catastrophe. In the aftermath of the First World War, the world is changing faster than its young socialites can understand, and their lives of glamour, gossip, and endless parties crackle with both excitement and dread. At the center of the story is Adam Fenwick-Symes, a struggling writer drifting through a world of debutante balls, scandal sheets, reckless romances, and high-society absurdities. Every moment…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
A dazzling and devastating satire of the interwar years, Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh captures the glittering chaos of London's Bright Young Things-a generation dancing on the edge of catastrophe. In the aftermath of the First World War, the world is changing faster than its young socialites can understand, and their lives of glamour, gossip, and endless parties crackle with both excitement and dread. At the center of the story is Adam Fenwick-Symes, a struggling writer drifting through a world of debutante balls, scandal sheets, reckless romances, and high-society absurdities. Every moment promises a new start-publishing success, love, fortune-but each hope collapses into another twist of fate, another public embarrassment, another private disappointment. As the pace accelerates and the jokes turn darker, Waugh transforms champagne-bubbled frivolity into dark comedic tragedy, revealing a society sprinting toward disaster with a smile. Blending interwar British fiction, classic modernist literature, and biting 1920s social satire, this novel is a vivid portrait of a culture obsessed with appearances, performance, and distraction. Waugh's prose is brilliant, bitter, and eerily contemporary in its depiction of celebrity culture, social instability, and the fragile pursuit of happiness. ¿ Ideal for readers of: ¿ social satire and modernist classics ¿ interwar British literature ¿ post-World War I cultural commentary ¿ dark comedic British novels A standout choice for libraries, book clubs, and collections in 20th-century literary studies, Vile Bodies remains one of Waugh's most iconic works-at once hilarious and heartbreaking, glamorous and bleak. A glittering comedy with a broken heart at its center, Vile Bodies is a masterpiece of vintage literary satire that still feels unsettlingly, brilliantly modern.

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Autorenporträt
Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966) was one of the most brilliant and influential writers of the twentieth century, celebrated for his razor-sharp wit, elegant prose, and unflinching eye for the absurdities of modern life. A novelist, biographer, critic, and travel writer, Waugh became known for fiction that blends satire, social observation, and emotional undercurrents, exposing the anxieties and contradictions of the age between the World Wars. Born into a literary family and educated at Oxford, Waugh emerged as a defining voice of the interwar generation, chronicling a society dazzled by glamour yet hollowed by disillusionment. His early novels capture the reckless energy of the Bright Young Things, the privileged but directionless youth of 1920s London, whose parties and scandals masked a deeper cultural unease. With a style that is simultaneously elegant and caustic, he dissected class, religion, ambition, and identity with unmatched precision. Vile Bodies (1930) stands at the heart of Waugh's early career. A darkly comedic portrait of fame, fashion, and moral drift, it marks the moment when his satire turned sharper-moving from playful mockery to something more haunting, as the optimism of the postwar decade gives way to uncertainty. The novel anticipates the concerns that would later define his work: the fragility of happiness, the pull of faith, and the struggle to find meaning in a rapidly changing world. Admired by readers, critics, and fellow writers across generations, Waugh occupies a permanent place in the canon of classic modernist literature. His novels remain essential reading for anyone interested in interwar British fiction, social satire, and the complex dance between comedy and tragedy in human affairs.