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Sign up todayThe Way of All Flesh
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Learn moreThis brilliant satirical novel traces the life and loves of Ernest Pontifex, a young man who survives the baleful influence of a hateful, hypocritical father, a doting mother, and a debauched wife to emerge as a decent, happy human being. A fascinating character study, it is also a stinging satire of the Victorian gentry's pomposity, sentimentality, pseudo-respectability, and refined crueltyโone still capable of delivering deathblows to the same traits in our present world. Since its original publication in 1903, The Way of All Flesh has enjoyed continuous popularity. Every new generation finds in this novel a reaffirmation of youth's admirable will for freedom of personal expression and its rightful struggle against the tyranny of harsh parents.
Samuel Butler (1835โ1902) was born at Langar rectory, near Bingham, Nottinghamshire, and was educated at Shrewsbury and St. Johnโs College, Cambridge. In his later years he turned to Shakespearean scholarship and published translations of Iliad and Odyssey. He is best known for his autobiographical novel The Way of All Flesh, published posthumously in 1903.
Frederick Davidson (1932โ2005), also known as David Case, was one of the most prolific readers in the audiobook industry, recording more than eight hundred audiobooks in his lifetime, including over two hundred for Blackstone Audio. Born in London, he trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and performed for many years in radio plays for the British Broadcasting Company before coming to America in 1976. He received AudioFileโs Golden Voice Award and numerous Earphones Awards and was nominated for a Grammy for his readings.
Reviews
“One of the summits of human achievement.”
โIf the house caught on fire, the Victorian novel I would rescue from the flames would be not Vanity Fair or Bleak House but Samuel Butlerโs The Way of All Flesh. It is read, I believe, mostly by the young, bent on making out a case against their elders, but Butler was fifty when he stopped working on it, and no reader much under that age is likely to appreciate the full beauty of its horrors, which are not the horrors of the Gothic novel but of family life.โ
โOne thinks of it lying in Samuel Butler's desk for thirty years, waiting to blow up the Victorian family and with it the whole great pillared and balustraded edifice of the Victorian novel.โ
โ[Butler] uses ordinary conversational English idiom, managing to seem perfectly at ease in it, and continually showing how rich in expressive turns and formulations and apt and vivid words it really isโฆThis is the perfection of what one loosely thinks of as the โplainโ style and which of course is not โplainโ at all, but fashioned with hard labor and the most sensitive and resourceful skill. In writing Butler attained that โgrace after the fleshโ for which Ernest pined in vain.โ