St. Leon: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century

St. Leon: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century

by WilliamGodwin (Author), WilliamD.Brewer (Author)

Synopsis

St Leon (1799), Godwin's second novel, is a work of challenging ambition. Like his first, Caleb Williams (1794), it is a confessional tale of obsession and spiralling pursuit. In St Leon the emphasis is on the individual's powerlessness in the face of momentous historical change. Set during the Protestant Reformation, St Leon tells the harrowing tale of an exiled French aristocrat who is given the secrets of the philosopher's stone and the elixir of life. His attempts to use these gifts to benefit humanity lead only to disaster. Plunged into self-destructive isolation, he wanders through the centres of European religious controversy, arousing fascination, suspicion, and social unrest wherever he goes. The text of this first paperback edition is based on the 'Bentley's Standard Novels' edition of 1831.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 508
Publisher: Broadview Pr
Published: 30 Nov 2005

ISBN 10: 1551115387
ISBN 13: 9781551115382

Media Reviews

William Brewer's edition of St. Leon is more than simply a new, well-edited version of the text. The introduction alone--which includes a precis of other important current critical work on St. Leon--makes this a must-have edition, rehearsing as it does the place of this unclassifiable novel in Godwin's development and in the period, the influences visible in the novel, including its political implications and sources, and the novel's reception and literary heirs. Many of these issues can be further pursued through the judiciously chosen excerpts in the appendices. -- Lisa M. Steinman, Reed College


St. Leon, Godwin's second major novel, is a radical experiment in fictional genres. Into a historical novel of vast range and violence Godwin melded elements of the domestic novel, the philosophical novel, and the scientific fantasy. More relentlessly than the earlier Caleb Williams, this novel tests Godwin's philosophical premises to destruction, showing the importance--and failure--of family affections and the disintegration of effective social responsibility. William Brewer's judicious annotations and informative introduction equip the reader to understand Godwin's re-evaluation of his earlier views; the appendices contain ample material illustrating the novel's influence on other writers, its relation to Godwin's other works, and the lively reactions of contemporary reviewers. -- Victoria Myers, Pepperdine University

William Brewer's edition of St. Leon is more than simply a new, well-edited version of the text. The introduction alone--which includes a precis of other important current critical work on St. Leon--makes this a must-have edition, rehearsing as it does the place of this unclassifiable novel in Godwin's development and in the period, the influences visible in the novel, including its political implications and sources, and the novel's reception and literary heirs. Many of these issues can be further pursued through the judiciously chosen excerpts in the appendices. -- Lisa M. Steinman, Reed College


St. Leon, Godwin's second major novel, is a radical experiment in fictional genres. Into a historical novel of vast range and violence Godwin melded elements of the domestic novel, the philosophical novel, and the scientific fantasy. More relentlessly than the earlier Caleb Williams, this novel tests Godwin's philosophical premises to destruction, showing the importance--and failure--of family affections and the disintegration of effective social responsibility. William Brewer's judicious annotations and informative introduction equip the reader to understand Godwin's re-evaluation of his earlier views; the appendices contain ample material illustrating the novel's influence on other writers, its relation to Godwin's other works, and the lively reactions of contemporary reviewers. -- Victoria Myers, Pepperdine University

William Brewer's edition of St. Leon is more than simply a new, well-edited version of the text. The introduction alone--which includes a precis of other important current critical work on St. Leon--makes this a must-have edition, rehearsing as it does the place of this unclassifiable novel in Godwin's development and in the period, the influences visible in the novel, including its political implications and sources, and the novel's reception and literary heirs. Many of these issues can be further pursued through the judiciously chosen excerpts in the appendices. -- Lisa M. Steinman, Reed College

Author Bio

William Brewer is a Professor of English at Appalachian State University. His publications include The Shelley-Byron Conversation (1994) and The Mental Anatomies of William Godwin and Mary Shelley (2001).