The Levant Trilogy: "Danger Tree", "Battle Lost and Won" and "Sum of Things" (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #844962 in Books
- Published on: 1996-04-25
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 576 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Having fled a Europe overrun by Hitler, Guy and Harriet Pringle live a precarious existence in Cairo. Also newly arrived is Simon Boulderstone, a young officer. For each of them there is disillusionment and isolation as they battle with their problems heightened by the uncertainties of war.
About the Author
Olivia Manning was the author of more than twelve novels including The Balkan Trilogy, The Doves of Venus, The Playroom and the Remarkable Expedition. She was awarded the CBE in 1976 and died in 1980.
Customer Reviews
Fantastic.Just as good as The Balkan Trilogy
If you loved Olivia Manning`s The Balkan Trilogy,then you will equally love The Levant Trilogy which takes place in Egypt.
Most of the characters from The Balkan are gone,but don`t panic cause Guy and Harriet are still here(wouldn`t be the same without)and we are also introduced to a whole new group of characters who are equally interesting and likeable.
I agree with another reviewer on here.Mrs Mannings descriptions and observations of war are staggering and beautifull and you really feel like you are climbing up the pyramids with Guy and Harriet or driving along the Sphinx.It is funnier than the Balkan Trilogy and is moving without being sentimental.
Recommended to all fans of The Balkan Trilogy.You will be sorry to finish it,i was.
Fantastic stuff
As great a masterpiece as the Balkan Trilogy
One of Olivia Manning's greatest achievements was to produce a second trilogy after the Balkan Trilogy that matches it in every way. She did not, as it were, go off the boil - something readers might have feared after the sheer triumph of the first threesome. Few authors have written better about war and its fallout. Her description of the war in the north African desert is staggeringly good, and if one did not know that she'd spent that time in Cairo, it would be hard not to conclude that she'd been out there herself with the SAS.
Memory; marriage; passage of time
Memory; marriage; passage of time. This book, and its predecessor (the Balkan Trilogy), are classics. Also worth reading: the Alexandria Quartet (L Durrell) and the biography of Elizabeth David (L Chaney).




