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The Way of All Flesh - by Samuel Butler (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- Ernest Pontifex is born into a deeply religious Victorian family where obedience is demanded and individuality suppressed.
- Author(s): Samuel Butler
- 378 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Classics
Description
About the Book
A boy raised in strict faith begins to question everything he's been taught. As he grows into a man, rebellion simmers beneath the surface. Can he ever truly escape the legacy of his father?
Book Synopsis
Ernest Pontifex is born into a deeply religious Victorian family where obedience is demanded and individuality suppressed. As he grows, he confronts the crushing expectations of his parents, religious dogma, and the rigid values of society-ultimately seeking his own path through a maze of personal failure and philosophical awakening. The Way of All Flesh is a powerful, semi-autobiographical critique of Victorian morality, tracing one man's painful journey toward self-realization in a world built to deny it.
Samuel Butler (1835-1902) was an iconoclastic Victorian author who published a variety of works. Two of his most famous pieces are the Utopian satire Erewhon and a semi-autobiographical novel published posthumously, The Way of All Flesh, which attacks Victorian-era hypocrisy.