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The history man:

a novel
Front Cover
21 Reviews
Houghton Mifflin, 1976 - Fiction - 230 pages
Free love and free living are the rules the Kirks live by, but their lives become challenged by their beliefs.

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Review: The History Man

User Review  - Becky Vowles - Goodreads

While I really wanted to like this, and although I did enjoy the obvious descriptions of UEA, I found the whole thing rather difficult to finish. I didn't find the writing funny enough to count as a ... Read full review

Review: The History Man

User Review - Goodreads

Probably would have enjoyed this more if I'd read it when I originally purchased it, 20-30 yrs ago - recently found it,yellowed, slightly water damaged with spots of mould throughout. It felt little ...

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About the author (1976)

A professor of English literature and American studies who has published numerous critical works, Malcolm Bradbury is also a novelist whose protagonists are academics who make muddles of their personal and professional lives. He maintains that his main concern is to explore problems and dilemmas of liberalism and issues of moral responsibility. The targets of Bradbury's satires include intellectual pretension, cultural myopia, and official smugness. His protagonists are largely sympathetic, if comic, failures at mastering their own fates in a world of absurd rules and regulations. His major novels include Eating People Is Wrong (1959), Stepping Westward (1965), and The History Man (1975). This last, a novel of intellectual and political conflict at an English university in the late 1960s, was made into a successful television minidrama. More recent novels include Rates of Exchange (1983) and Cuts (1987).

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