Eyeless in Gaza

by Aldous Huxley

Hardcover, 1936

Status

Available

Call number

FIC A4 Hux

Publication

Harper & Brothers Publishers (First Edition)

Pages

473

Description

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY DAVID BRADSHAW Anthony Beavis is a man inclined to recoil from life. His past is haunted by the death of his best friend Brian and by his entanglement with the cynical and manipulative Mary Amberley. Realising that his determined detachment from the world has been motivated not by intellectual honesty but by moral cowardice, Anthony attempts to find a new way to live. Eyeless in Gazais considered by many to be Huxley's definitive work of fiction.

Description

One of Brave New World author Aldous Huxley's finest and most personal novels, Eyeless in Gaza is the story of one man's quest to find a meaningful life, which leads him from blind hedonism to political revolution to spiritual enlightenment.

Collection

Barcode

9543

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1936

Physical description

473 p.; 8.3 inches

User reviews

LibraryThing member TakeItOrLeaveIt
“There’s a fog upon LA. And my friends have lost their way…” was the passage to cross my mind upon waking up and viewing the inexhaustible fog outside my father’s mountainside window. Then the rain began. It was an apt day to finish the most self-reflective novel of my favorite
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author’s, Eyeless in Gaza. A discursive tale on the perils of contemplation, the terrors of trivialities, and of course, the great indignation love can cause an individual.

Nothing like finishing a book accentuating the trivialities of trivialities all the while knowing what is truly important. Huxley's struggle between finding spirituality, having a command on science and overcoming ill-advised love is a rainy Sunday kind of book. It took me almost two months to finish the novel mostly because I wasn't rushing. I read many treatises, essays, and plays in between and saved eyeless for bathroom reading. Huxley would have been fine with that. I know of numerous instances in which peoples lives have been altered while reading Eyeless. Not so much because of the book itself but corresponding instances with reading it. For example, a terribly underrated British band named after the book for its lead singer, Martyn Bates, happened to be reading the novel when he met band cohort Peter Becker. I was of course hoping for the same. I didn't find him but I did discover Alexander Scriabin, The Russian symbolist composer that suits my fancy, I also developed a true friendship, and finally made a decision I've been attempting to make for practically seven years: to pursue an autodidactic lifestyle and terminate my life-long bind to the education institute.

Is pitting the soothsaying Dr. Miller against the English cynic in a Socratic battle on humanity/pacifism a scurrilous afterthought? Well, Huxley did wait until the end of the novel to reveal the mystic Miller so his doubters wouldn’t get to that point, but he makes clear how he finally ceased his years of doubting and what would make a logical British man turn over to an American optimist. A human for a human instead of human vs a bug. The optimist will be granted approval and find humanity hearty and the cynic will continue to hate. The ultimate relationship so well exposed in the most Huxlian way at the end of this great read.
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LibraryThing member TheAmpersand
A good book, perhaps, but not a particularly enjoyable one. "Eyeless in Gaza" is very well-written and its tone is surprisingly literary, particularly since I've always considered Brave New World's prose to be rather workmanlike. Still, it's hard to get away from the fact that it concerns a small
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group of impossibly rich, privileged, and well-connected British characters who seem to specialize in making themselves unhappy. Those who argue that most of the books in the literary fiction section written before 1950 are the tiresome bellyaches of rich, neurotic white guys will probably find a lot of ammunition here. Still, the novel effectively portrays the spiritual and intellectual disorientation that many felt during the nineteen thirties and serves as a Bildungsroman for an entire cohort of characters, most of whom come to bad ends. "Eyeless in Gaza" might also be considered a merciless psychoanalytical treatment of the previous age: almost all the Victorians in the book come off as impossibly repressed and emotionally crippled. Still, there are a few memorable characters here, such as Mark Straithes's tortured twentieth century ascetic and the louche, sensual Mary Amberly. The novel's main character, Anthony Beavis, remains something of an enigma, and I'd be curious to learn weather the philosophies that he adopted to overcome his spiritual torpor -- anthropology, trippy mysticism, vegetarianism and uncompromising pacifism -- survived the early forties intact. Still, the book is heavy and slow moving, and the tension that might have been built up by its various complex storylines is seriously diminished by its unusually disjointed temporal structure. Huxley puts forth some interesting ideas and writes some exquisitely cunning dialogue, but "Eyeless in Gaza" feels heavy and slow-moving, and its overall mood is one of frustration and impotence. One gets the impression that most of its characters are at the mercy of their origins. It's admirable and erudite, but it's not a book that I'm likely to read again.
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LibraryThing member woking57
One of the greatest books of the 20th Century, and Huxley's best.
LibraryThing member sfisk
Huxley at his best! This is probably my favorite from him, a lengthy read, and it will have you looking up words and translating, but worth the time.
LibraryThing member P_S_Patrick
I enjoyed this book, at over 600 pages I finished it in well under a week, and even then the end seemed to come on suddenly. Again, Huxley amuses the reader whilst delivering his thoughts and reflections, this time mainly centred around pacifism. This didn't add anything to the book for me, but I
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found the storyline good enough, and the way that the chapters are achronological seemed to give some unexpected variety of excitement to the whole affair. This is a must read for Huxley fans, I think, and better than the last one of his that I read, Antic Hay, which was thoroughly good too. Like that book, this one is hilarious in places, I'm never quite sure if he means to be so funny, but I think it's the frank and perhaps ever so slightly exaggerated things his characters do and say, so convincingly believable at the same time, that does it for me.
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LibraryThing member Schmerguls
On Jan 5, 1953 I said: "Started Aldous Huxley's Eyeless in Gaza. Very literate, very good." On Jan 8: "Reading in Huxley. He is a beautifully literate genius, shining with pure genius. He is the sort of guy one should read with a notebook, because he gives you so much to think on. Yesterday I was
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struck by this jewel: "Hell is the incapacity to be other than the creature one finds oneself ordinarily behaving as.' Mind you, I seldom agree with him, but he sounds so deep-thoughted. The story is one that hops from about 1902 to 1912 to 1926 to 1933, then back to 1912, then 1934, then back, and so requires added concentration just to keep the people straight. Anthony Dennis is the mouthpiece of Huxley, I guess. He had as his lover in 1914 Mary Amberley, who has in 1934 degenerated into a nympho-slut. Her daughters are Helen (who marries the impotent Hugh Ledwigge) and Joyce." On Jan 9: "Huxley continues eminently readable. In 1914, Anthony has seduced Joan, Brian Foye's girl, but Mary Amberley, his then mistress, egged him on. In 1928 Helen, Mary's daughter, has an abortion (father: Gerry, Mary's paramour); in 1934, Anthony has gone to Mexico with Mark Staithes. All very biting commentary on intellectuals and their lives." On Jan 12: "Finished Eyeless in Gaza. Brian killed himself after he found out Joan had fallen in love with Anthony--who had gotten Joan to love him because he bet his then-mistress, Mary Amberley, that he'd. Good book."
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LibraryThing member jonfaith
That was the chief difference between literature and life. In books, the proportion of exceptional to commonplace people is high; in reality, very low.

Practically bed ridden, incapacitated and unable to sleep I completed this chewy hulk of a novel in 24 hours. Overflowing with ideas, Eyeless asks
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about Action: what is one to do? Anthony, one of the novels chief characters remains preoccupied with freedom throughout his life. The narrative rotates between 5 or so timelines and flips back to each periodically, like Moloch gleefully dealing Texas Hold'em. Others are debauched or likewise stalwarts in various ideologies. Huxley asserts through the fog of politics and history that a point might be, just keep it simple. Take it easy on your colon. Don't try to f*ck people over. Make amends. There are no overt references to gardens, but I accept that such is implied. This was published in 1936 and with Spain and the Dark Times on the horizon, this is penned in a certain panic. I wondered whether our own anxiety will crystalize in such a masterful experiment.
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LibraryThing member PilgrimJess
"Hell is the incapacity to be other than the creature one finds oneself ordinarily behaving as."

Eyeless in Gaza was first published in 1936 and said to be the most auto-biographical of all Huxley's works. The novel centres around Anthony Beavis and his group of friends spanning their lives from
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childhood to middle age during the first decades of the 20th century. The story is told in non-sequential chapters and from differing characters' perspective.

It is a pretty hefty tome and isn't a particularly easy read yet many commentators seem to believe it to be the greatest of the author's books, so why didn't I like it more?

Firstly; it's length, it's just too long, featuring far too many inconsequential details and sub-plots that add nothing to the overall tale.

Secondly; I found it far too difficult. The non-sequential nature of the novel did have the effect of allowing two strands of the story, one taking place in 1914 featuring the sad demise of Beavis's childhood friend Brian, the other following Anthony's and Mark's trip to Mexico to join an insurrection there in 1934, to come to a climax almost simultaneously for the reader. However, on the other hand this disjointed style hindered rather than aided my understanding of the overall message that Huxley was trying to convey. I found myself trying to remember just who the characters were and what their relationships were in the various time periods. On several occasions I found myself flipping back to a previous chapter to remind myself. Perhaps a series of flashbacks would have proved more manageable.

Thirdly; there were just too many big ideas vying for prominence, ideas concerning the great social and artistic upheavals of the day being espoused by wealthy privileged individuals who seem to have little contact or in common with the masses making them seem like unreliable commentators. Equally I found the overall bleak outlook, the defeatism and pacifism on show at the end of the novel something of a dampener. Huxley seems be trying to prove that there is more to life than love but ultimately concludes that really there isn't.

On a couple of occasions I was tempted to give up on this book but there also elements of this book which I found enjoyable. The characterisation was generally well done as was the depiction of their surroundings. At times Huxley displays a certain satirical humour whilst at times, particularly the section involving Anthony and Mark in Mexico, the author proves that he could, if he wanted to be, an entertaining storyteller.

Having read and enjoyed the author's Brave New World I was looking forward to reading this book but found it somewhat over-blown and disappointing. Oh well, you can't win 'em all.
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LibraryThing member edwinbcn
Eyeless in Gaza is considered a novel that is difficult to read because of its narrative structure consisting of random flash backs. It is Aldous Huxley's most autobiographical novel. With this in mind, the key to the structure of the novel is the author's birthdate. Aldous Huxley was born on 26
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July 1894. The main character in the book was born on that date, and the flash backs to apparently random dates can be understood as mental flashbacks. This is just the way the mind works! The structure of the novel is entirely clear after the reader has internalized the age of the main character.

I have read many books by Aldous Huxley but never a biography. The introduction by David Bradshaw merely consists of a short biography of Huxley's life, without any interpretation of the novel. The novel's plot mirrors the life of the author, with focal points around the tree most traumatic events in Huxley's life being the death of his mother, his temporary loss of eye sight and the suicide of his brother.

I would not agree to the idea that Eyeless in Gaza is Huxley's most philosophical novel, but it is perhaps the heaviest, most pondersome. Most of his other novels are light and humorous.
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LibraryThing member Kristelh
Reason read: 2023, Oct botm Reading 1001

This story takes place during the early 1900s to 1930's and tells the story of Anthony Beavis. He lost his mother and then he lives much of his life closed off emotionally from others. He has affairs with older women and their daughters. He betrays his one
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good friend and is admittedly a coward. After going through several relationships, death of his friend, an encounter with a doctor in Mexico, Anthony has a heart change. He becomes an active pacifist. Historically the book is set during the WWI, post WWI, Spanish Civil War, the depression, and pre WWII with a look at the decadence of Germany with it s Cabaret life style. The story is not told chronologically and jumps back and forth from time before and after the death of his friend, Brian. This was a definite turning point for Anthony. The characters are numerous and a bit hard to keep track of all them but the story line is linked to there motivations and desires and their overall change. The side trips into dialogues of philosophizing could have been shortened and this would have not hurt the story in any way. The book is not the one people think of when they think of Huxley but it is probably his best book. I will remember this one. The title is from the Bible story of Samson after Delilah betrays him to the philistines and he is blinded and made to work as a slave.
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Rating

½ (153 ratings; 3.7)

Call number

FIC A4 Hux
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