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  • Published: 1 September 2010
  • ISBN: 9781409078760
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 368

The Bell (Vintage Classics Murdoch Series)





Iris Murdoch's funny and sad novel is about religion, the fight between good and evil and the terrible accidents of human frailty.

Imber Court is a quiet haven for lost souls.

It offers a sanctuary for those who can neither live in the world, nor out of it. But beneath the gentle daily routines of the community run currents of supressed desire, religious yearning and a legend of disastrous love. Charming, indolent Dora arrives in the midst of all this, and half-unwittingly conjures these submerged things to the surface.

‘She’s writing about the only things that matter – love, goodness and how to be happy’
Independent

‘A book that everyone who’s ever been tempted to throw in the towel and become a hermit should read’
Guardian

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY SARAH PERRY

  • Published: 1 September 2010
  • ISBN: 9781409078760
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 368

About the author

Iris Murdoch

Iris Murdoch was born in Dublin in 1919. She read Classics at Somerville College, Oxford, and after working in the Treasury and abroad, was awarded a research studentship in Philosophy at Newnham College, Cambridge. In 1948 she returned to Oxford as fellow and tutor at St Anne’s College and later taught at the Royal College of Art. Until her death in 1999, she lived in Oxford with her husband, the academic and critic, John Bayley. She was made a Dame of the British Empire in 1987 and in the 1997 PEN Awards received the Gold Pen for Distinguished Service to Literature.

Iris Murdoch made her writing debut in 1954 with Under the Net. Her twenty-six novels include the Booker prize-winning The Sea, The Sea (1978), the James Tait Black Memorial prize-winning The Black Prince (1973) and the Whitbread prize-winning The Sacred and Profane Love Machine (1974). Her philosophy includes Sartre: Romantic Rationalist (1953) and Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals (1992); other philosophical writings, including 'The Sovereignty of Good' (1970), are collected in Existentialists and Mystics (1997).

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Praise for The Bell (Vintage Classics Murdoch Series)

She's writing about the only things that matter – love, goodness and how to be happy

Patrick Gale, Independent

The plot is both comical and moving, and it’s a book that everyone who’s ever been tempted to throw in the towel and become a hermit should read....despite the grand subjects at issue, the novel’s tone is not at all dry or didactic – it is, on the contrary, wonderfully lively and poignant at the same time, tender with a sprightly social comedy reminiscent of PG Wodehouse and Barbara Pym

Guardian

How bloody good her novels are – how intelligent, how lucent, how divinely crazy. They’re fun – I’d forgotten that

Sarah Waters, Guardian

Her characters are described with loving exactitude and in such depth that their struggles to define what it means to live a good life take on dramatic force

New York Times

Above all, she was a consummate story-teller, prodigiously inventive and generous, in the realist tradition of Dickens, Jane Austen, George Eliot, Henry James, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky

Independent

A tragi-comic masterpiece... A magnificent novel

Susan Hill, The Lady

Her best book… Classic Murdoch tropes… are married to a spry and well-developed plot

James Marriott, The Times

The Bell is not frightening, precisely, but it offers that uneasy sensation of being suspended, somehow, between what is familiar and what is strange… a kind of hot, dreamlike muddle… The Bell has, in the 60 years since its publication, lost none of its power to disrupt

Sarah Perry, Daily Telegraph
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