Hopeful Monsters

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Hopeful Monsters

Author: Nicholas Mosley
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Publisher: Dalkey Archive Press
Set in the 1920s and ‘30s, Hopeful Monsters is the story of two remarkable people: Max, an English student of physics and biology; and Eleanor, a German Jewess who grows up in politically radical circles in Berlin in the ferment that would lead to the rise of Adolf Hitler and World War II. They meet, love, go their separate ways and come together again during the maelstrom of the Spanish Civil War. The story takes them from Berlin to Cambridge, to Russia, to the Sahara, to a deserted monastery in the Pyrenees—and finally to Los Alamos and the making of the atomic bomb. In the course of their travels they meet many of the century’s giants: Wittgenstein, Einstein, Rosa Luxemburg, Hitler, and several others, making Hopeful Monsters (as one reviewer put it) “a vast work, covering the whole of the twentieth century.”

Startlingly ambitious and profound in its insights, this is Nicholas Mosley’s masterpiece—a novel in which ideas and action combine in a moving and immensely readable narrative.

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Amazon.com

Like Sartre, Camus, and Kundera before him, Nicholas Mosley has put forth a supremely challenging work that relies as much on philosophical and political themes as pure storytelling. Max Ackerman and Eleanor Anders are ambitious intellectuals—British and German, respectively—whose fascination with the scientific trends and political upheaval of the 20th century take them around the world and, eventually, into each other’s arms. Intensifying, perhaps complicating the narrative of this 1990 Whitbread Prize winner is Mosley’s use as a metaphor the Talmudic myth of the Lamed-Vov, a tale of 36 upstanding people for whom God sustains life on Earth. Left unanswered is whether Ackerman and Anders are among them.

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