
The Eye Of The Storm
Condition remarks:
Condition: Good to fair. Paperback. Page Condition: Good - possible tanning. Markings: possible previous owner inscription.
The Eye of the Storm is a towering work of Australian literary fiction from Nobel Prize-winning author Patrick White, widely regarded as one of the greatest novels ever produced in the English language. The novel chronicles the final days of Elizabeth Hunter, a once-formidable and imperious Sydney socialite, as she lies dying in her opulent home attended by nurses and visited by her two adult children — a daughter, Dorothy, Princess de Lascabanes, and a son, Sir Basil Hunter, a celebrated actor. White masterfully uncovers the psychological and emotional wreckage that Elizabeth has wrought upon those around her, weaving past and present together through memory, desire, and self-delusion. At its heart, the novel argues that moments of transcendence — symbolised by Elizabeth's experience of calm at the centre of a cyclone — stand in stark contrast to the petty, compromised lives her children have inherited. Written with savage wit and profound compassion, it is a breathtaking meditation on power, mortality, and what it means to truly live.
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Condition remarks:
Condition: Good to fair. Paperback. Page Condition: Good - possible tanning. Markings: possible previous owner inscription.
The Eye of the Storm is a towering work of Australian literary fiction from Nobel Prize-winning author Patrick White, widely regarded as one of the greatest novels ever produced in the English language. The novel chronicles the final days of Elizabeth Hunter, a once-formidable and imperious Sydney socialite, as she lies dying in her opulent home attended by nurses and visited by her two adult children — a daughter, Dorothy, Princess de Lascabanes, and a son, Sir Basil Hunter, a celebrated actor. White masterfully uncovers the psychological and emotional wreckage that Elizabeth has wrought upon those around her, weaving past and present together through memory, desire, and self-delusion. At its heart, the novel argues that moments of transcendence — symbolised by Elizabeth's experience of calm at the centre of a cyclone — stand in stark contrast to the petty, compromised lives her children have inherited. Written with savage wit and profound compassion, it is a breathtaking meditation on power, mortality, and what it means to truly live.











