Wildly funny and wonderfully bizarre, All About H. Hatterr is one of the most perfectly eccentric and strangely absorbing works modern English has produced. H. Hatterr is the son of a European merchant officer and a lady from Penang who has been raised and educated in missionary schools in Calcutta. His story is of his search for enlightenment as, in the course of visiting seven Oriental cities, he consults with seven sages, each of whom specializes in a different aspect of “Living.” Each teacher delivers himself of a great “Generality,” each great Generality launches a new great “Adventure,” from each of which Hatter escapes not so much greatly edified as by the skin of his teeth. The book is a comic extravaganza, but as Anthony Burgess writes in his introduction, “it is the language that makes the book. . . . It is not pure English; it is like Shakespeare, Joyce, and Kipling, gloriously impure.”
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Specifications
Book Details
Imprint
New York Review Books
Publication Year
2007 November
Contributors
Author Info
G. V. Desani (1909—2001) was born Nairobi, Kenya and raised in India. In the late 1930s, and throughout the war, he was a BBC broadcaster and lectured on India. He contributed regularly to The Times of India's Illustrated Weekly and produced a weekly opinion page called "Very High and Very Low." He moved to the United States in 1970 to teach at Boston University and subsequently the University of Texas at Austin, where he was a Professor of Religion and Philosophy.
Anthony Burgess (1917–1993) was a prolific novelist, composer, librettist, essayist, semanticist, translator, and critic. He is best known for the novel A Clockwork Orange.
Dimensions
Width
17 mm
Height
203 mm
Length
128 mm
Weight
329 gr
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Nice job again, Flipkart!
My friends told me that Flipkart was going through some issues with its courier system these past weeks. It seems that they've finally sorted them out because I received this book on time as promised. I ordered it on the second of October and received it just yesterday, that is, on the fourth. No complaints in that area!
As for the book, I have only just begun so I must reserve full judgement, but the forty-odd pages I've read through have been quite delightful. I had assumed that Rushdie wa...