
Those Barren Leaves
Versandkostenfrei!
Erscheint vorauss. 8. November 2025
19,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
PAYBACK Punkte
10 °P sammeln!
A blistering, witty lampoon of privilege and pretension Aldous Huxley s Those Barren Leaves returns, restored and radiant. In this razor-sharp satirical fiction, Huxley dissects an insular circle of aesthetes, intellectuals, and social climbers whose lofty talk of art, philosophy, and beauty thinly masks spiritual emptiness and moral decline. With dark humour and crystalline prose, the novel skewers upper-class society, exposing how fashionable intellectual discourse becomes performance rather than truth. Readers will find a witty, bittersweet exploration of longing, vanity, and the cost of li...
A blistering, witty lampoon of privilege and pretension Aldous Huxley s Those Barren Leaves returns, restored and radiant. In this razor-sharp satirical fiction, Huxley dissects an insular circle of aesthetes, intellectuals, and social climbers whose lofty talk of art, philosophy, and beauty thinly masks spiritual emptiness and moral decline. With dark humour and crystalline prose, the novel skewers upper-class society, exposing how fashionable intellectual discourse becomes performance rather than truth. Readers will find a witty, bittersweet exploration of longing, vanity, and the cost of living for appearances a philosophical novel that pulses with modern relevance. Recognized as a major work of 1920s literature and modernist novel-making, Those Barren Leaves book occupies a unique place in British social commentary and Huxley satire. Its mix of biting comedy and reflective depth makes it essential reading for fans of classic literature and contemporary readers who crave smart, provocative fiction. This edition from Alpha Editions restores the text for today s and future generations, bringing back a title that was out of print for decades. Meticulously prepared and elegantly produced, this is not merely a reprint it s a collector s item and cultural treasure for book lovers, scholars of 1920s literature, and anyone drawn to literary fiction that interrogates the theater of intellect. Ideal for collectors and casual readers alike, this is Huxley at his most incisive: a timeless critique of status, taste, and the hollow rhetoric of high society.