The Strange Case of Dr Simmonds & Dr Glas

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Robson, 2002 - 195 էջ
"Dr. Simmonds, a well-established general practitioner in London's Swiss Cottage, finds himself ministering more and more in the postwar 1950s to the ills of the Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany who have settled thickly in his old neighborhood. He also finds himself irresistibly drawn into an increasingly troubling fantasy life by Yvonne Bloomberg, the attractive young wife of one of his more, to him, execrable patients." "Repelled as he is by Anton Bloomberg's "running nose, his wheezing chest, the rust in his pelvis, the Christmas alcohol in his liver, the Scrooge in his soul," Simmonds can imagine only the repugnance the pretty, vulnerable Yvonne must feel at her husband's proprietary touch. It's when she sends Simmonds a copy of Dr. Glas, a novel about a doctor who colludes with a patient in the murder of her spouse, that the boundaries between reality and fantasy begin to blur, and Simmonds begins to act upon impulses rising from a darker, undoctorly side of his nature." "Blind to the prejudices that blind him, Simmonds unwittingly reveals in the disquieting pages of his journals the rancor he harbors in his soul as he sets out on a course that withholds its full horror until the very end."--BOOK JACKET.

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Հեղինակի մասին (2002)

Dannie Abse was born in Cardiff, Wales on September 22, 1923. He trained as a doctor at King's College London and Westminster Hospital, where he qualified in 1950. In 1951, he was called up for national service as a medical officer in the RAF. In 1954, he went to the Middlesex Hospital, where he stayed for the rest of his medical career, as specialist in charge of the chest clinic at the Central Medical Establishment. His first collection of poetry, After Every Green Thing, was published in 1948 and his first autobiographical novel, Ash on a Young Man's Sleeve, was published in 1954. His other collections of poetry include A Small Desperation; Funland; White Coat, Purple Coat: Collected Poems, 1948-88; Two for Joy: Scenes from Married Life; Speak, Old Parrot; and Ask the Moon. He won the Roland Mathais Prize in 2007 for Running Late and the Wales Book of the Year award in 2008 for The Presence. His other novels include Some Corner of an English Field; O. Jones, O. Jones; There Was a Young Man from Cardiff; and The Strange Case of Dr. Simmonds and Dr. Glas. He wrote two books of memoirs, A Poet in the Family and Goodbye, Twentieth Century. He also wrote a number of plays. In the early 1950s, he edited a magazine entitled Poetry and Poverty and compiled a variety of anthologies including Wales in Verse and the Hutchinson Book of Post-War British Poets. In 2012, he accepted his CBE for services to poetry and literature. He died on September 28, 2014 at the age of 91.

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