Publisher's Synopsis
Wild, wacky and ultimately terrifying, this is the Electra story re-imagined for our times: an exploration of guilt and responsibility which reads like a modern Californian sequel to Apocalypse Now.
Hardback (03 Jul 1997)
Not available for sale
Out of stock
Wild, wacky and ultimately terrifying, this is the Electra story re-imagined for our times: an exploration of guilt and responsibility which reads like a modern Californian sequel to Apocalypse Now.
Chatto was founded in 1855 by a bookseller-publisher called John Camden Hotten. On Hotten's death, Andrew Chatto, who had worked there since he was fifteen, acquired the business with a sleeping partner, W.E. Windus. In 1917, The Hogarth Press was founded by Virginia and Leonard Woolf, and in 1946 this too came under Chatto's management. The firm published many significant writers and classics - R.L. Stevenson, Lytton Strachey, Marcel Proust, Laurie Lee, Christopher Isherwood, Rosamond Lehmann, Henry Green, Sigmund Freud and Iris Murdoch. Cecil Day-Lewis, Poet Laureate, was editorial director in the 1960s.
ISBN: | 9780701161835 |
Publisher: | Chatto & Windus |
Imprint: | Chatto & Windus |
Pub date: | 03 Jul 1997 |
DEWEY: | 813 |
DEWEY edition: | 21 |
Number of pages: | 350 |
Weight: | 352g |
Height: | 233mm |
Width: | 154mm |