A David Lodge Trilogy: "Changing Places", "Small World", "Nice Work"
|
| List Price: | £14.99 |
| Price: | £8.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
34 new or used available from £3.75
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #31473 in Books
- Published on: 1993-12-02
- Binding: Paperback
- 912 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
This omnibus lines up David Lodge's trio of brilliantly comic novels that revolve around the University of Rummidge and the lives of its role-swapping academics. When Philip Swallow, lecturer in English at Rummidge, changes places with flamboyant Morris Zapp of Euphoric State University, USA, trouble ensues. Then, ten years on, older but not noticeably wiser, they are let loose on the international conference circuit - a veritable academic carnival. And finally, Dr Robyn Penrose becomes part of a scheme to learn about industry instead of reading about it, with hilarious results. David Lodge exposes the dizzy pursuit of knowledge - literary, commercial, romantic and erotic - with unparalleled wit and insight.
Customer Reviews
The Campus Novel Trilogy
`Changing Places` begins a trilogy of campus novels (along with `Small World' and `Nice Work`) by the popular British author that are now available to purchase as an anthology. Reading all three books is further necessitated by the fact they share common characters. `Changing Places` is about the transformative experience of living in an another culture (albeit ones not vastly dissimilar, in this case the UK and US) and the social transformations taking places at the tail end of the 60s. The plot conceit, as with `Nice Work', is that two completely different people are displaced by an exchange programme foisted upon them by their employers. In this case, it involves a reserved British professor temporarily trading posts with a brash American academic - Morris Zapp and Phillip Swallow respectively.
While these characterisations are somewhat cliched, they are nonetheless written with an empirical astuteness of someone who recognises that most stereotypes have an element truth at their core. As with most of Lodge's novels, it is a compulsive read with attractively realised characters. Insightful, witty, and sometimes a little too symmetric in its plotting, his novels can be a little too neatly predictable. However, there is enough sex, humour and cutting social observation to sustain even the most cynical reader.
Of the 'trilogy', 'Small World' is arguably the most dated. Revolving around the frivolous exploits of a newly-made academic jet-set riding high at a time of increased travel opportunities and university wealth, it is the more prosaic of the three. Morris Zapp and Phillip Swallow get into increasingly improbable situations that start to border on slapstick, while a peripheral cast of characters cross paths in a series of unlikely comic coincidences around the world.
While Lodge has a great eye for the hypocrasies and pretentions of academic life, 'Small World' has less interesting things (compared to the other novels in the trilogy) about life outside academia and the context in these absurdities are allowed to take place. Given the unbeleivable nature of much of what happens, we depend a lot on the novel's humour, which frequently borders the banal. Moreover, of what is smugly depicted about the changing fortunes of the academics - their jet-setting in particular - seems dated now in a more global context where international travel is less and less exclusive. However, as always, Lodge is cutting when examining the petty conceits, jealousies and - in some cases - paranoia of his cast of writers and lecturers.
The third novel in the series, 'Nice Work', is a clever, well-constructed comedy and social commentary about a clash of cultures in a fictional industrial town in the Midlands. Well-paced and meticulously plotted, the novel revolves around the unlikely convergence of Dr Robyn Penrose - a professor of Women's studies and purporter of deconstructuralist and feminist theory - and Vic Wilcox, MD of an industrial engineering plant.
Written aptly at a time of great social transformation (Thatcher, class strife, the decline of industry and massive cuts to public spending) David Lodge pieces together an astute oberservation of British life. Moreover, he is a master at developing tangible and appealing characters by telling the story - alternately - from their perspective. Billed as `the campus novel meets the industrial novel', this is a highly readable and thought-provoking work. Taken in tandem, the three novels provide an entertaining view of academic life through three decades that is as interesting as a piece of social history as it is funny. Enjoy.
Almost a bit of social history
I can't dissect this novel as well as the other reviewers but apart from being a rather cracking humourous read, these novels give me sense of what campus life was like in the twilight of the golden age of British academia and some very witty observations on the 70s and 80s Britain. Having used this set as a "taster" i went on to read far more dAvid Lodge than I originally expected.
The Best of the Campus Novel Genre
Whether you are new to David Lodge, or whether you are familiar with his other works, this trilogy is a must for every reader. No small book collection or vast library is complete without it.
Lodge's trilogy spans three decades of the 'international [university] campus'. In Phillip Swallow and Morris Zapp, we see two central characters who are poles apart professionally and personally and yet drawn together time and time again with hilarious and sometimes chaotic results.
Lodge demonstrates his knack of telling a good yarn and makes writing the contemporary novel appear effortless. If, like me, you thoroughly enjoy this collection you will probably go on to read his many other novels or critical works.
David Lodge is one of England's most talented and brilliant living writers and this trilogy is one of his best works. It is simply first rate. Just read it.




