9781566633949
Complete Essays: 1936-1938, Vol. 4 share button
Aldous Huxley
Format Hardcover
Dimensions 6.46 (w) x 9.52 (h) x 1.48 (d)
Pages 416
Publisher Dee, Ivan R. Publisher
Publication Date December 2001
ISBN 9781566633949
Book ISBN 10 156663394X
About Book

In this fourth volume of a projected six, Huxley registers his deep misgivings about the course of history in the late 1930s as the world moved toward a second global war. Many of his essays reflect his continuing interest in the conventions of popular culture as well as the philosophy of science and history, particularly as they inform developments in art and politics. But his larger concerns oscillate between empirical science and the particulars of social history, on the one hand, and his need for a grounding of absolute truth that would transcend both. His critique of politics and the prevailing ideologies of fascism and capitalism overlaps with his attempt to locate a foundational truth in a world of change and diversity. He embraced a form of political pacifism that intersected with an increasing attraction to religious quietism and mysticism. And he made a sustained effort to reconcile mystical experience with contemporary theories of physics and the philosophy of science. At their best, Huxley's essays stand among the finest examples of the genre in modern literature. "A remarkable publishing event...beautifully produced and authoritatively edited."—Jeffrey Hart.

Reviews

Atlantic Monthly

An important and admirable publishing event.

Economist

Much to enjoy in these volumes...they are important as a document and a window on to the stage in the evolution of his mind.

Los Angeles Times

He writes with an easy assurance and a command of classical and modern cross-references.
— Christopher Hitchens

New Yorker

Huxley’s political writing is often deliberately perverse.
— Leo Carey

The New Yorker

Huxley’s political writing is often deliberately perverse.
— Leo Carey

Times Literary Supplement

The editors have done their job with commendable thoroughness.
— P.N. Furbank

Atlantic Monthly

An important and admirable publishing venture…exceptionally edited and organized.

The New Yorker

To read all the essays in sequence is like being enrolled at the college of your dreams.