After many a summer

by Aldous Huxley

Paperback, 1976

Status

Available

Call number

823/.9/1

Publication

St Albans : Triad, 1976., A Triad Panther Book.

Description

A Hollywood millionaire with a terror of death, whose personal physician happens to be working on a theory of longevity--these are the elements of Huxley's caustic and entertaining satire on man's desire to live indefinitely. A highly sensational plot that will keep astonishing you to practically the final sentence. --The New Yorker

User reviews

LibraryThing member lazysky
Extraordinary and inspired novel containing some of his sharpest satire, this time aimed at America -- the opening segment featuring an hallucinatory car ride through southern California is perfectly realized. Stated first edition first printing. Publishers dust jacket in good + condition,
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unclipped $2.50 price, nicks/chips to edges, closed tear to front panel, crease to back panel. Owner name on ffep, boards straight, sharp. Originally titled After Many A Summer as initially released in the United Kingdom.

Story of America's superficiality & a Hollywood millionaire fearful of imminent death (the secret to eternal life is discovered in the chemistry of a carp), who decides to extend his life despite discovering the cost of acquiring apelike features. Written shortly after the author's relocating from England to California. The title is taken from Tennyson's poem Tithonus, about a Greek mythology figure whom Aurora gave eternal life but not eternal youth. The book received the 1939 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction.
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LibraryThing member ursula
Jeremy Pordage is an English archivist who takes a job working for Jo Stoyte, a millionaire Californian who collects valuable objects without much knowledge about or interest in them. Stoyte's latest acquisition is something called the Hauberk papers, and Pordage is thrilled to get to go through
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them, cataloging and delving into the papers of some family of English earls. He's thrilled at the job, but the surroundings and people prove to be a bit beyond what he might have expected to deal with. Stoyte is having a relationship with a young woman named Virginia, also called The Baby. She, in turn, is irresistible to Stoyte's doctor, Dr. Obispo, and Obispo's assistant Peter. Rounding out the cast of characters is Mr. Propter, a neighbor.

As is usually the case with Huxley's work, an entertaining story overlays an exploration of human attitudes and philosophies. The fear of death and the question of how to spend one's life are at the bottom of it all. Stoyte is terrified of dying, and Obispo and Pete are working to find ways to prolong human life. Unexpectedly, Pordage comes across a diary that may shed some light on the research Obispo is doing. Many more twists and turns occur in the plot, and much philosophizing is done by various characters, and it's really up to the reader how deeply he wants to explore each character's position. That's what I like about this book; it's easily read as just a mildly diverting and sometimes absurd story with a side of the meaning of life. But if you want, it can also make you think about your own feelings about death and what makes life worth living.

Recommended for: philosophers who don't take themselves too seriously, people who wonder about the wisdom of eternal life.

Quote: "Mr. Stoyte had a peculiar hatred for the ragged hordes of transients on whom he depended for the harvesting of his crops, a hatred that was more than the rich man's ordinary dislike of the poor. Not that he didn't experience that complex mixture of fear and physical disgust, of stifled compassion and shame transformed by repression into chronic exasperation."
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LibraryThing member PghDragonMan
One of Huxley's more accessible satires, especially to American readers. This is due in part to the novel being set in California of the mid Twentieth Century. In addition to poking fun at the California Lifestyle, he has fun with the concept of evolution. It is also a wonderful twist on parables
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that play with the moral "Be careful what you wish for, you just might get it".

It has been quite a while since I read this work, but the themes still come through to me. Highly suggested for lovers of classic satire that does not require much updating of the material. Also highly recommended for people exploring Huxley's fiction writing.
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LibraryThing member P_S_Patrick
Standard fare for Huxley here, make fun of various types of people, put in a selection of philosophical musings, and make sure there is some sort of human interest - a love triangle or an affair or something tragic, not forgetting the usual good measures of irony and snobbery. This time it's the
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Americans he has us sniggering at, and he does it rather well, despite this book being written nearly 70 years ago, they have the same brash and uncultured stereotype today, (sorry to any Americans reading this, I'm sure you're not all like that). The plot was somewhat predictable, and the ending ridiculous and not as amusing as the opening. Throughout the story there is a plot running about aging and time, and I'm sure he borrowed some of his ideas from the work his brother did with with the Axolotl, (a pedomorphic salamander). I didn't quite enjoy this as much as Eyeless in Gaza, or Antic Hay, but it was no effort at all to get through it and it was enjoyable enough.
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LibraryThing member figre
This starts out as a very interesting study of the strange types of people who populated (actually still populate) Los Angeles. There are the rich and the beautiful and the power-hungry and the naïve and the dust-bowlers and the philosophers. This is the story of a rich man trying to extend his
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life forever with the help of a doctor who should not be trusted. The millionaire has a young girlfriend that is the center of attention to a number of other gentlemen. And there is much lying and two-facedness and other things that are to be expected of a tale that takes a look at the black-hearted soul of LA.

But the promising start quickly trails off into speeches and pontifications that, while obviously making the points Huxley wants made, do so in such a pedantic and verbose way that – well, I just don’t care. Of course, this is Huxley’s style, and the style he was going for. But I much prefer being shown without as much telling.
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LibraryThing member isabelx
Mrs. Pordage, The Araucarias, Woking, England," he wrote, smiling a little as he did so. The exquisite absurdity of that address was a standing source of amusement. 'The Araucarias, Woking'. His mother, when she bought the house, had wanted to change the name, as being too ingenuously middle-class,
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too much like a joke by Hilaire Belloc. 'But that's the beauty of it,' he had protested. 'That's the charm.' And he had tried to make her see how utterly right it would be for them to live at such an address. The deliciously comic incongruity between the name of the house and the nature of its occupants! And what a beautiful, topsy -turvy appositeness in the fact that Oscar Wilde's old friend, the witty and cultured Mrs. Pordage, should write her sparkling letters from The Araucarias, and that from these same Araucarias, these Araucarias, mark you, at Woking, should come the works of mingled scholarship and curiously rarefied wit for which her son had gained his reputation. Mrs. Pordage had almost instantly seen what he was driving at. No need, thank goodness, to labour your points where she was concerned. You could talk entirely in hints and anacoluthons; she could be relied on to understand. The Araucarias had remained The Araucarias.

The story starts with the arrival of a pretentious (see above!) academic at the Californian castle of Joseph Stoyte, who has employed him to work on the Hauberk Papers, 27 packing cases of manuscripts that he bought at auction. He finds himself working for an immensely rich man, an art collector and a philistine, a bully and a philanthropist, an ageing cemetery owner who hates and fears the idea of his own death. Stoyte also employs two scientists to search for a way to prolong human life, and when Dr Obispo realises that there may be a clue to an anti-ageing in the diary of a member of the Hauberk family, it paves the way for a shocking discovery.

Although I read a lot of Aldous Huxley's novels when I was at university, I don't think that this was one of them, as I would definitely have remembered the clever use of a particular biological concept that was mentioned on my course.
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LibraryThing member lauriebrown54
This book is a somewhat odd mash-up of satire and philosophical lecture. On the one hand, we have an uber rich old man, Jo Stoyte, who lives in a castle in the San Fernando Valley. He owns a bank, a cemetery, an oil company… his home is reminiscent of Hearst Castle, filled with every modern
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convenience and stuffed with art from around the world bought with no plan or passion. His very young live in girlfriend is called The Baby. He also has a live in physician, Obispo, who has no redeeming qualities, (I do wonder where he got his degree) to watch over him, give him testosterone shots, and do research on extending the human life span. At the beginning of the story a British scholar, Jeremy Pordage, arrives, to work on the crates and crates of documents from the Hauberk family- this seems at first to have no bearing on the story, but in the end, it very much does. The other main characters are Peter, Obispo’s young, innocent assistant, and Mr. Propter, who does not live in the castle. While the other characters are the satire of capitalism, lechery, conspicuous consumption, Forest Lawn type cemeteries, and the fear of death, Propter is the moral and philosophical force. And, sadly, while the rest of the story is pretty amusing- and horrific in places- Propter is as dry as a mummy’s fart. He’s a noble person- he helps out the migrant workers (remember, this is during the Depression), is working on a way for people to be self-sufficient, and is against the kind of wealth aggregation that Stoyte represents- but he does not serve to advance the plot at all. It’s like Huxley couldn’t decide what kind of book to write, so he wrote them both and did not blend them elegantly at all. Four stars.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1939

Physical description

254 p.; 17.7 cm

ISBN

0586044329 / 9780586044322

Local notes

Omslag: Ikke angivet
Omslaget viser The Eye of Time, et ur lavet af Salvador Dali. I det hvide af øjet kan man også læse signaturen Dali
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi

Other editions

Pages

254

Rating

½ (135 ratings; 3.6)

DDC/MDS

823/.9/1
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