<p>Arnold Bennett was born and grew up in Hanley deep in the heart of the &lsquo;Potteries&rsquo; (his &lsquo;Five Towns&rsquo;) a land scarred and its people debilitated by industrial pollution and greed of gain.&nbsp; He left the area in 1898 aged 21 to work as a solicitor&rsquo;s clerk in London writing in his spare time for magazines such as <em>Tit-Bits</em>.&nbsp; Bennett was a follower of Guy de Maupassant believing that interesting and enlightening books could be written around the lives of ordinary people a view vindicated in 1902 when he began publishing a series of books on life in the Potteries to instant critical acclaim.</p><p><em>Anna of the Five Towns</em>&nbsp;is the first of these novels and tells the tale of Anna Tellwright who lives a miserable existence under the stern hand of her miserly father Ephraim.&nbsp; Bennett&rsquo;s prose evokes the bleak environment of the potteries and the oppressive influence of Wesleyan Methodism as Anna in turn inherits wealth attracts the attention of the handsome and well-respected Henry Mynors and discovers tragically too late that her true feelings lie elsewhere.&nbsp; Bennett&rsquo;s genius holds up a mirror to the repressed and materially-obsessed values of Victorian Society &ldquo;all the pretences by which society contrives to tolerate itself&rdquo; and which shepherd a reluctant Anna towards conformity.</p><p>Although scorned by the privileged self-absorbed and self-regarding Bloomsbury Group Arnold Bennett&rsquo;s work has nevertheless stood the test of time with noted critic John Carey declaring Bennett his &lsquo;hero&rsquo; and praising his works as &ldquo;a systematic dismemberment of the intellectuals&#39; case against the masses&quot;.</p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.