Julian Grant Loses His Way

Fiction & Literature, Classics, Literary, Mystery & Suspense, Thrillers
Cover of the book Julian Grant Loses His Way by Claude Houghton, Valancourt Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Claude Houghton ISBN: 1230000301735
Publisher: Valancourt Books Publication: February 18, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Claude Houghton
ISBN: 1230000301735
Publisher: Valancourt Books
Publication: February 18, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

"Claude Houghton's novels are always interesting . . . Julian Grant Loses His Way is the best book of his that I have read . . . Houghton's talent is at its best." - Graham Greene, The Spectator

"Fascinating, absorbing reading . . . an arresting book." - Kirkus Reviews

"He is an extremely interesting novelist, and a genuinely original one." - J. B. Priestley

Shortly after dawn, Julian Grant finds himself in London, unsure of who he is or where he's been, but sensing vaguely that he is on his way to an appointment. Taking refuge in a café to collect his thoughts over a cocktail, he is suddenly beset by a series of scenes and images from his past: his monastic childhood, the dismal years in a dreary office job, his unexpected inheritance of a fortune, his cruelty to the women who have loved him. As he struggles to understand his situation and figure out who he is and where he is going, he tries to discover the truth behind his strange experience. Is he going mad? Is he asleep and somehow trapped in a surreal dreamworld? Or could there be some other, more chilling explanation for his disorientation and the disturbing visions to which he is being subjected? This first-ever reprint of Houghton's classic novel features a reproduction of its original jacket art.

Claude Houghton (1889-1961) won a cult following in the 1930s for his mystery and thriller novels featuring razor-sharp dialogue and unusual metaphysical themes, the best known of which is I Am Jonathan Scrivener (1930). Though praised by critics and widely admired by his fellow authors, including J. B. Priestley, Hugh Walpole, and Henry Miller, Houghton has fallen into neglect and deserves rediscovery as a key novelist of the interwar period in Great Britain. Several of Houghton's other novels are also available from Valancourt Books.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

"Claude Houghton's novels are always interesting . . . Julian Grant Loses His Way is the best book of his that I have read . . . Houghton's talent is at its best." - Graham Greene, The Spectator

"Fascinating, absorbing reading . . . an arresting book." - Kirkus Reviews

"He is an extremely interesting novelist, and a genuinely original one." - J. B. Priestley

Shortly after dawn, Julian Grant finds himself in London, unsure of who he is or where he's been, but sensing vaguely that he is on his way to an appointment. Taking refuge in a café to collect his thoughts over a cocktail, he is suddenly beset by a series of scenes and images from his past: his monastic childhood, the dismal years in a dreary office job, his unexpected inheritance of a fortune, his cruelty to the women who have loved him. As he struggles to understand his situation and figure out who he is and where he is going, he tries to discover the truth behind his strange experience. Is he going mad? Is he asleep and somehow trapped in a surreal dreamworld? Or could there be some other, more chilling explanation for his disorientation and the disturbing visions to which he is being subjected? This first-ever reprint of Houghton's classic novel features a reproduction of its original jacket art.

Claude Houghton (1889-1961) won a cult following in the 1930s for his mystery and thriller novels featuring razor-sharp dialogue and unusual metaphysical themes, the best known of which is I Am Jonathan Scrivener (1930). Though praised by critics and widely admired by his fellow authors, including J. B. Priestley, Hugh Walpole, and Henry Miller, Houghton has fallen into neglect and deserves rediscovery as a key novelist of the interwar period in Great Britain. Several of Houghton's other novels are also available from Valancourt Books.

More books from Valancourt Books

Cover of the book Requiem at Rogano by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book The House of the Wolf by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Man in a Black Hat by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Clock Without Hands by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Hell Hound by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book A Short Walk in Williams Park by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book The Glass Cage by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Foreign Affairs by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book The Black Cloud by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Ritual in the Dark by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Ratman's Notebooks by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book A Kestrel for a Knave by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Gog by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book The Prestige by Claude Houghton
Cover of the book Jubb by Claude Houghton
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy