A Guest of Honour
A Guest of Honour is a 1970 novel by Nobel winning South African writer Nadine Gordimer. Published four years after her novel The Late Bourgeois World, the novel is a political novel that explores the role of revolutionary ideas in new African states.[1]
Critical reception
The New York Times reviewer Thomas Fisk called the novel "a long, spacious, comprehensive work of fiction" which has "something Olympian, something magnificently confident [about how] this South African writer goes about her work."[1] Fisk's review focuses on the stylistic qualities of the novel, calling the characters "exceedingly human: complicated, erring, driven by fleshy appetites and by the loftiest resolves" and discussing the setting as a "landscape so tactile and so sensuous that it becomes a participant in everything that occurs".[1]
References
Further reading
- Fido, Elaine (1978-04-01). "A guest of honour: A feminine view of masculinity". World Literature Written in English 17 (1): 30–37. doi:10.1080/17449857808588500. ISSN 0093-1705.
- Donge, Jan Kees van (1982-10-01). "Nadine Gordimer's "A Guest of Honour": A Failure to Understand Zambian Society". Journal of Southern African Studies 9 (1): 74–92.
- Ogede, Ode S. (2006-01-01). "The Liberal Tradition in South African Literature: Still a Curse? Nadine Gordimer's A Guest of Honour Revisited". International Fiction Review 33 (1). ISSN 1911-186X.
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