Parade's End: Ford Madox Ford

Parade's End: Ford Madox Ford

by Ford Madox Ford (Author), Ford Madox Ford (Author), Julian Barnes (Introduction)

Synopsis

Ford Madox Ford's great masterpiece exploring love and identity during the First World War, in a Penguin Classics edition with an introduction by Julian Barnes.

A masterly novel of destruction and regeneration, Parade's End follows the story of aristocrat Christopher Tietjens as his world is shattered by the First World War. Tracing the psychological damage inflicted by battle, the collapse of England's secure Edwardian values - embodied in Christopher's wife, the beautiful, cruel socialite Sylvia - and the beginning of a new age, epitomized by the suffragette Valentine Wannop, Parade's End is an elegy for both the war dead and the passing of a way of life.

Ford Madox Ford (1873-1939) served with the British army in World War I, an experience that was to form the basis of his novel Parade's End, published in four parts from 1924 to 1928. He wrote over eighty books, including The Good Soldier (1915), and divided his time between England, France and America.

Julian Barnes' most recent novel is The Sense of An Ending, for which he won the 2012 Man Booker prize. His other books include Flaubert's Parrot, A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters and Arthur and George.

'The finest English novel about the Great War'
Malcolm Bradbury

'The best novel by a British writer ... It is also the finest novel about the First World War. It is also the finest novel about the nature of British society'
Anthony Burgess

'There are not many English novels which deserve to be called great: Parade's End is one of them'
W.H. Auden

'The English prose masterpiece of the time'
William Carlos Williams

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 848
Edition: 1
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Published: 07 Mar 2019

ISBN 10: 0241372542
ISBN 13: 9780241372548
Book Overview: Ford's great masterpiece set in the First World War, now in Penguin Black Classics with an introduction by Julian Barnes.

Media Reviews
A neglected masterpiece of twentieth-century fiction - the English War and Peace -- John Gray
Masterly...Ford knows more and sees deeper -- Julian Barnes
There are not many English novels which deserve to be called great: Parade's End is one of them -- W. H. Auden
[Ford] was the only Englishman who stood alongside the great 'moderns' - Joyce, Eliot and Pound -- Peter Ackroyd
Author Bio
Ford Madox Ford was born Ford Hermann Hueffer in Kent in 1873. In 1915 he published The Good Soldier, and in the same year he enlisted in the army, serving as an infantry officer. Parade's End, the culmination of his experiences during the First World War, was published in four parts between 1924 and 1928. He moved to Paris in 1922 and founded the Transatlantic Review, whose contributors included James Joyce, Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein. He died in Deauville, France in 1939.