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Pat Barker's brilliant antiwar novel, Regeneration, was widely hailed as a masterpiece and was named by the New York Times Book Review as one of the four best novels of 1992. Now Pat Barker returns to the World War I era with The Eye in the Door, winner of the Guardian Fiction Prize for 1993.
It is the spring of 1918. On the battlefields of France, a mammoth German offensive threatens the English army with defeat. In England itself, a beleaguered government and panic-stricken, vengeful public seek scapegoats. Two groups are targeted for persecution and prosecution: pacifists and homosexuals. Many are jailed, others lead dangerous double lives; and "the eye in the door" becomes a symbol of the paranoia that threatens to destroy the very fabric of British society.
Central to this novel is Lieutenant Billy Prior, recently released from treatment for shell shock by psychiatrist Dr. William Rivers. Prior is in London, assigned to a domestic Intelligence unit. His position demands that he investigate an imprisoned female pacifist accused of plotting a political assassination - a woman who raised him as a child, and who now accuses him of betraying that childhood. At the same time, he has had a casual but intense sexual encounter with a fellow patient of Dr.
Rivers - Charles Manning, an upperclass officer whose social status and battlefield wounds must shield him from the growing danger of his exposure as a homosexual.
Billy Prior is the man in the middle: a child of the working class raised to the rank of officer and gentleman; a soldier scarred by the horror of war but loyal to the men in the trenches; a bisexual of omnivorous appetites and withered emotions; and above all, a human being who feels himself torn in two as he is asked to take sides. Around this drama of split personality and the search for honor and truth, the author creates a vivid picture of a war-haunted society.
Richly imagined characters like Billy Prior and Charles Manning seamlessly mesh with such riveting real-life figures as the complex and compassionate Dr. William Rivers and his most famous patient, poet and soldier Siegfried Sassoon. The Eye in the Door is a triumph that equals Regeneration and establishes Pat Barker's place in the very forefront of contemporary novelists.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
English Poets, Fiction, Gay men, Gays, Literature, Poets, Psychiatrists, World War, 1914-1918, War stories, Biographical fiction, Historical fiction, Great britain, fiction, Fiction, historical, general, Fiction, war & military, World war, 1914-1918, fiction, Gay men, fiction, Large type books, Fiction, historical, Fiction, biographical, Psychiatrists, fictionPlaces
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20th centuryShowing 9 featured editions. View all 13 editions?
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Work Description
The second installment in the Regeneration Trilogy
London, 1918. Billy Prior is working for Intelligence in the Ministry of Munitions. But his private encounters with women and men – pacifists, objectors, homosexuals – conflict with his duties as a soldier, and it is not long before his sense of himself fragments and breaks down. Forced to consult the man who helped him before – army psychiatrist William Rivers – Prior must confront his inability to be the dutiful soldier his superiors wish him to be...The Eye in the Door is a heart-rending study of the contradictions of war and of those forced to live through it.The second book in the Regeneration trilogy
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- Created April 1, 2008
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July 25, 2024 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
February 4, 2023 | Edited by OnFrATa | Merge works (MRID: 45139) |
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April 1, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from Scriblio MARC record |