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Modern Classics Hangover Square

paperbackJuly 3, 2001
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ISBN-13: 9780141185897 ISBN-10: 0141185899
Publisher
Penguin
Binding
paperback
Published
July 3, 2001
Weight
0.5 lbs
Dimensions
19.80×1.70×12.90 cm

About this book

Modern Classics Hangover Square by Hamilton, Patrick. paperback edition. ISBN: 9780141185897.

A pitch-black comedy set in London overshadowed by the looming threat of the Second World War, Patrick Hamiltons Hangover Square includes an introduction by J.B. Priestley in Penguin Modern Classics. London, 1939, and in the grimy publands of Earls Court, George Harvey Bone is pursuing a helpless infatuation. Netta is cool, contemptuous and hopelessly desirable to George. George is adrift in a drunken hell, except in his dead moments, when something goes click in his head and he realizes, without a doubt, that he must kill her. In the darkly comic Hangover Square Patrick Hamilton brilliantly evokes a seedy, fog-bound world of saloon bars, lodging houses and boozing philosophers, immortalising the slang and conversational tone of a whole generation and capturing the premonitions of doom that pervaded London life in the months before the war. Patrick Hamilton (1904-1962) was one of the most gifted and admired writers of his generation. His plays include the thrillers Rope (1929), on which Alfred Hitchcocks film of the same name was based, and Gas Light (1939), twice successfully adapted for the screen, the second time starring Ingrid Bergman. Among his novels are The Midnight Bell (1929); The Siege of Pleasure (1932); The Plains of Cement (1934); a trilogy entitled Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky (1935), adapted into a BBC mini-series in 2007; Hangover Square (1941); and The West Pier (1951), Mr Stimpson and Mr Gorse (1953) and Unknown Assailant (1955), which together comprise The Gorse Trilogy. If you enjoyed Hangover Square, you might like Norman Collinss London Belongs to Me, also available in Penguin Modern Classics. One of the great books of the twentieth century Independent on Sunday A masterly novel ... you can almost smell the gin Keith Waterhouse, Spectator