Description
Ranny Ransome is a quixotic juvenile man, adherent to sprightly fitness exercises and to struggling with his being fat in his entire life, physicality and psyche. He likes the ladylike and sporty Winny Dymond, and especially likes joining her in the Combined Maze, a graceful, elaborate, stimulating faction fitness routine in which each male and female of the Polytechnic Gymnasium show and tell their talents. Regrettably, Ranny is deceived by ravishing Violet who casted a magical spell over him, an intimate liberal life force who needs nothing but to have an independent life on her own will. But, to her surprise and dismay, Violet learned she is expecting, Ranny candidly weds her but she opposes the idea, implicating himself and her in a pestilent latest Combined Maze of courtesies aimed to repress and censor the basic deference that present vibrancy to Life. May Sinclair inspires her audience in with a serene, restrained, Victorian literature that is likely fully in harmony with the traditional ethicalities of her humanity, but maintains in the corresponding factious, diffident style to narrate tales of sexuality, extramarital affairs, cajolery, divorce, and treachery, silently expostulating the strangling assemblages of humanity that frightened strong interest in every way. May Sinclair was the fictitious name of Mary Amelia St. Clair, a renowned English author who drafted of 24 novels, short tales and poetry. She was an active elector and enlisted herself in the Woman Writers’ Suffrage League. May Sinclair was also a critical analyst in the field of modernist poetry and literature. She is also ascribed with first utilizing the word stream of consciousness in a fictional lexicon, when studying the first series of Dorothy Richardson’s narrative series Pilgrimage, in The Egoist.
Product ID: 9781776740727
Sku: R1-D0M5-4VFZ