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Books with title Antic Hay

  • Antic Hay: A Novel

    Aldous HUXLEY

    (Penguin Books, Jan. 1, 1948)
    None
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley, Flo Gibson, Audio Book Contractors, Inc.

    Audiobook (Audio Book Contractors, Inc., April 21, 2020)
    The lifestyles, careers, romances, and peccadillos of various British intellectuals, scientists, and artists are dealt with - often with hilarity and sometimes with dark comedy and sophisticated banter. All of this is set off by the ingenious idea of self-inflating pants!
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    Paperback (Vintage Classics, Oct. 26, 2004)
    “Futilitarian” best describes the type of desultory, pleasure-seeking intellectual Huxley pinned so mercilessly to the literary map in Antic Hay. Wickedly funny and deliciously barbed, the novel epitomizes the glittering neuroticism of post-First World War London.
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    Paperback (Dalkey Archive Press, March 1, 2007)
    London life just after World War I, devoid of values and moving headlong into chaos at breakneck speed Aldous Huxley's Antic Hay, like Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises, portrays a world of lost souls madly pursuing both pleasure and meaning. Fake artists, third-rate poets, pompous critics, pseudo-scientists, con-men, bewildered romantics, cock-eyed futurists all inhabit this world spinning out of control, as wildly comic as it is disturbingly accurate. In a style that ranges from the lyrical to the absurd, and with characters whose identities shift and change as often as their names and appearances, Huxley has here invented a novel that bristles with life and energy, what the New York Times called "a delirium of sense enjoyment!"
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    (BANTAM BOOKS, )
    None
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    Paperback (Perennial Library, Jan. 1, 1965)
    None
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    Paperback (Independently published, Jan. 7, 2020)
    Antic Hay, a comic novel by Huxley, takes place in London, and depicts the aimless or self-absorbed cultural elite in the sad and turbulent times following the end of World War I. It follows the lives of a diverse cast of characters in bohemian, artistic and intellectual circles. It clearly demonstrates Huxley's ability to dramatise intellectual debates in fiction and has been called a "novel of ideas" rather than people. It expresses a mood of mournful disenchantment and reinforced Huxley's reputation as an iconoclast. The book was condemned for its cynicism and for its immorality because of its open debate on sex. Aldous Leonard Huxley was an English writer and philosopher who wrote nearly fifty books, both novels and non-fiction works—as well as wide-ranging essays, narratives, and poems. By the end of his life, Huxley was widely acknowledged as one of the foremost intellectuals of his time, nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature seven times. A humanist and pacifist, he grew interested in philosophical mysticism and universalism addressing these subjects in some of his works. In his most famous novel Brave New World (1932) and his final novel Island (1962), he presented his vision of dystopia and utopia, respectively.
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    (The Albatross [1932], Jan. 1, 1932)
    None
  • Antic Hay.

    Aldous Huxley

    (London: Heinemann 1940. (Evergreen), Jan. 1, 1940)
    317p paperback, pink card wrapper with turquoise spine, no. 1 in the Evergreen series, spine a little rubbed, boards lightly soiled, front hinge slightly cracked, binding otherwise very good, paper browned with age
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley, Robert Whitfield, Blackstone Audio, Inc.

    Audiobook (Blackstone Audio, Inc., Oct. 21, 2000)
    Young Oxford tutor Theodore Gumbril has become thoroughly dismayed by the formality of college life and the staid British institutions of learning. An impetuous need for celebration, even rebellion, possesses him. He and his bohemian companions embark on wild and daring "bacchanalian" adventures that steer them resolutely away from stifling conventions of behavior.Antic Hay, first published in 1923, is one of Aldous Huxley's earlier novels, and like them is primarily a 'novel of ideas' involving conversations which disclose viewpoints rather than establish characters; its polemical theme unfolds against the backdrop of London's post-war nihilistic Bohemia. This is Huxley at his biting, brilliant best -- a novel, loud with derisive laughter, which satirically scoffs at all conventional morality and at stuffy people everywhere -- a novel that's always charged with excitement.
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    Paperback (Independently published, Jan. 7, 2020)
    Antic Hay, a comic novel by Huxley, takes place in London, and depicts the aimless or self-absorbed cultural elite in the sad and turbulent times following the end of World War I. It follows the lives of a diverse cast of characters in bohemian, artistic and intellectual circles. It clearly demonstrates Huxley's ability to dramatise intellectual debates in fiction and has been called a "novel of ideas" rather than people. It expresses a mood of mournful disenchantment and reinforced Huxley's reputation as an iconoclast. The book was condemned for its cynicism and for its immorality because of its open debate on sex. Aldous Leonard Huxley was an English writer and philosopher who wrote nearly fifty books, both novels and non-fiction works—as well as wide-ranging essays, narratives, and poems. By the end of his life, Huxley was widely acknowledged as one of the foremost intellectuals of his time, nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature seven times. A humanist and pacifist, he grew interested in philosophical mysticism and universalism addressing these subjects in some of his works. In his most famous novel Brave New World (1932) and his final novel Island (1962), he presented his vision of dystopia and utopia, respectively.
  • Antic Hay

    Aldous Huxley

    eBook (Passerino, Oct. 28, 2019)
    Antic Hay is a comic novel by Aldous Huxley, published in 1923. The story takes place in London, and depicts the aimless or self-absorbed cultural elite in the sad and turbulent times following the end of World War I.Aldous Leonard Huxley (26 July 1894 – 22 November 1963) was an English writer and philosopher.He wrote nearly fifty books—both novels and non-fiction works—as well as wide-ranging essays, narratives, and poems.