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Books published by publisher Blackthorn Press

  • Women in Love

    D H Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, Nov. 19, 2014)
    ‘Women in Love’ was written in Cornwall in 1916. It is a sequel to Lawrence's earlier novel ‘The Rainbow’ but did not appear in Britain until 1921, dogged by opposition and controversy. The main theme of the book is the relationship between two couples, Birkin and Ursula and Gerald and Gudrun. Birkin is based on Lawrence himself and there is much in the book about Lawrence’s own striving for an understanding of what makes for love between a woman and a man and a man and a man.
  • AARON'S ROD

    David Herbert Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, April 5, 2020)
    Aaron's Rod is a picaresque novel by D. H. Lawrence(11 September 1885 – 2 March 1930), started in 1918 and published in 1922.Aaron Sisson, a union official in the coal mines of the English Midlands, is trapped in a stale marriage. He is also an amateur, but talented, flautist. At the start of the story he walks out on his wife and two children and decides on impulse to visit Italy. His dream is to become recognised as a professional musician. During his travels he encounters and befriends Rawdon Lilly, a Lawrence-like writer who nurses Aaron back to health when he is taken ill in post-war London. Having recovered his health, Aaron arrives in Florence. Here he moves in intellectual and artistic circles, argues about politics, leadership and submission, and has an affair with an aristocratic lady. The novel ends with an anarchist or fascist explosion that destroys Aaron’s instrument.
  • AARON'S ROD

    David Herbert Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, Aug. 16, 2019)
    Aaron's Rod is a picaresque novel by D. H. Lawrence, started in 1918 and published in 1922.Aaron Sisson, a union official in the coal mines of the English Midlands, is trapped in a stale marriage. He is also an amateur, but talented, flautist. At the start of the story he walks out on his wife and two children and decides on impulse to visit Italy. His dream is to become recognised as a professional musician. During his travels he encounters and befriends Rawdon Lilly, a Lawrence-like writer who nurses Aaron back to health when he is taken ill in post-war London. Having recovered his health, Aaron arrives in Florence. Here he moves in intellectual and artistic circles, argues about politics, leadership and submission, and has an affair with an aristocratic lady. The novel ends with an anarchist or fascist explosion that destroys Aaron’s instrument.
  • AARON'S ROD

    David Herbert Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, March 23, 2020)
    Aaron's Rod is a picaresque novel by D. H. Lawrence (11 September 1885 – 2 March 1930), started in 1918 and published in 1922.The biblical title refers to the rod of Aaron in the Old Testament, Moses' brother who built the Golden Calf in the desert for the worship of the Israelites. The rod, his divine symbol of authority and independence, finds its echo in the flute of Aaron Sisson.
  • Aaron's Rod

    D. H. Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, Feb. 25, 2014)
    The protagonist of this picaresque novel, Aaron Sisson, is a union official in the coal mines of the English Midlands, trapped in a stale marriage. He is also an amateur, but talented, flautist. At the start of the story he walks out on his wife and two children and decides on impulse to visit Italy. His dream is to become recognised as a professional musician. During his travels he encounters and befriends Rawdon Lilly, a Lawrence-like writer who nurses Aaron back to health when he is taken ill in post-war London. Having recovered his health, Aaron arrives in Florence. Here he moves in intellectual and artistic circles, argues about politics, leadership and submission, and has an affair with an aristocratic lady. The novel ends with an anarchist or fascist explosion that destroys Aaron’s instrument. Many incidents in the novel have direct parallels with events in Lawrence's own life.
  • AARON'S ROD

    David Herbert Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, Dec. 15, 2019)
    Aaron's Rod is a picaresque novel by D. H. Lawrence(11 September 1885 – 2 March 1930), started in 1918 and published in 1922.Aaron Sisson, a union official in the coal mines of the English Midlands, is trapped in a stale marriage. He is also an amateur, but talented, flautist. At the start of the story he walks out on his wife and two children and decides on impulse to visit Italy. His dream is to become recognised as a professional musician. During his travels he encounters and befriends Rawdon Lilly, a Lawrence-like writer who nurses Aaron back to health when he is taken ill in post-war London. Having recovered his health, Aaron arrives in Florence. Here he moves in intellectual and artistic circles, argues about politics, leadership and submission, and has an affair with an aristocratic lady. The novel ends with an anarchist or fascist explosion that destroys Aaron’s instrument.
  • The Plumed Serpent

    D H Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, July 2, 2015)
    Lawrence wrote ‘The Plumed Serpent’ between 1923 to 1924 a time when he was in ill health, living in Mexico and becoming dependent on his wife Frieda.The plot revolves around a movement to replace the Christian God with the old pre-conquest gods, such as Quetzalcoatl, the plumed serpent of the title. Kate Leslie, an Irish woman, gets caught up in the movement and marries one of the leaders but to the very end of the novel is ambivalent towards the aims of the movement. Lawrence uses the story to propound his own views about religion and the need for woman to sublimate herself before man and the need for a new political order. This all seems deliciously old-fashioned and misplaced now but we forgive Lawrence because of the beauty of his writing and his ability to get beneath the surface of the country he describes.
  • Aaron's Rod

    D H Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, Feb. 8, 2012)
    This fully revised edition of Lawrence's early novel has a new introduction by Alan Avery which puts the novel in its historical setting and outlines Lawrence's ideas behind the writing of this problematic work.
  • Winter Sonata

    Dorothy Edwards

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, July 31, 2017)
    The central theme of 'Winter Sonata', mirrors the life of the author, Dorothy Edwards; that of the marginalization of women and the struggle of women to lead independent lives. In 'Winter Sonata', there is also the seeming inability for the men and women of the novel to connect in any deep way, reflecting Edward’s own lack of empathy.
  • The Rocking Horse Winner

    D H Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, July 7, 2014)
    'The Rocking Horse Winner' is one of Lawrence's more popular short stories with its mixture of the supernatural and it moral lesson of the corrupting nature of the love of money. But it has nothing new to say on the subject and without the central core of Lawrence's passion for what he is writing, seems somewhat trite.
  • Sons and Lovers

    D H Lawrence

    eBook (Blackthorn Press, Jan. 5, 2012)
    Sons and Lovers. The complete unexpurgated text with a new introduction and never seen before photographs.This edition of Lawrence's third novel contains:•12 new photographs of scenes from Nottinghamshire mining life in the early 20th century and rare family photos.•A new preface by Alan Avery in which he argues for a new view to be taken of Lawrence's sexuality.•The complete unexpurgated text.
  • Love Among the Haystacks

    D H Lawrence

    language (Blackthorn Press, April 13, 2014)
    ‘Love Among the Haystacks’ was written by D H Lawrence in 1912. It was the eighteenth of his sixty-seven short stories, all of which will be published individually in ebook format by the Blackthorn Press. In this story, Lawrence returns to the scenes of his young manhood with farming scenes and life he experienced when courting Jessie Chambers at Haggs Farm in Nottinghamshire. Two brothers find love in two different women, both out of the ordinary for farm lads - one a German nanny, the other the wife of a tramp who begs food from the farmers. Both men are redeemed from their rivalry for each other and their suppressed sexuality by the first experiences of love on the same night.