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Titus Alone
 
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Titus Alone (Paperback)

by Mervyn Peake (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
List Price: CDN$ 21.95
Price: CDN$ 16.02 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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6 new from CDN$ 16.01 3 used from CDN$ 7.47

Frequently Bought Together

Titus Alone + Gormenghast Book Two + Titus Groan
Total List Price: CDN$ 59.45
Price For All Three: CDN$ 43.40

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  • This item: Titus Alone by Mervyn Peake

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    Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca.
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  • Gormenghast Book Two by Mervyn Peake

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  • Titus Groan by Burgess A

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Gormenghast Book Two

Gormenghast Book Two

by Mervyn Peake
CDN$ 14.60
Titus Groan

Titus Groan

by Burgess A
4.3 out of 5 stars (38)  CDN$ 12.78
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Product Details


Product Description

Product Description

The final book in the Gormenghast trilogy. “Mervyn Peake is the master of the macbre and a traveller through the deeper and darker chasms of the imagination.”
The Times


About the Author

Mervyn Peake was born in 1911 in Kuling, Central Southern China, where his father was a medical missionary. His education began in China and then continued at Eltham College in South East London, followed by the Croydon School of Art and the Royal Academy Schools. Subsequently he became an artist, married the painter Maeve Gilmore in 1937 and had three children. During the Second World War he established a reputation as a gifted book illustrator for Ride a Cock Horse (1940), The Hunting of the Snark (1941), and The Rime of The Ancient Mariner (1943). Other books include Alice's Adventure's in Wonderland and Grimm's Household Tales (both 1946) and Treasure Island (1949). Titus Groan was published in 1946, followed in 1950 by Gormenghast. Among his other works are Shapes and Sounds (1941), Rhymes Without Reason (1944), Letters from a Lost Uncle (1948) and Mr Pye (1953). He also wrote a number of plays including The Wit to Woo (1957), which was met by critical failure. Titus Alone was published in 1959. Mervyn Peake died in 1968.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Frustrating., Jun 7 2004
By Stephanie Noverraz "crooty" (Lausanne, Switzerland) - See all my reviews
This is the third and last volume of the Gormenghast trilogy (after Titus Groan, and Gormenghast).

In this book, we follow Titus, now almost twenty, as he escapes from the Castle, flees its oppressive Ritual, and becomes lost in a sandstorm. Helped by the owner of a travelling zoo, Muzzlehatch, and his ex-lover Juno, he ends up in a big city. Of course, no one there has ever heard of Gormenghast, and the general opinion is that the boy is deranged, and with no paper, he's soon arrested for vagrancy.

Hopefully, there are a few people who believe in his story, or at least who are intrigued by it, and they try to help him. And now Titus, the deserter, the traitor, longs for his home, and looks for it all the time to prove, if only to himself, that Gormenghast is truly real.

I don't know how closely Titus Alone actually follows Mervyn Peake's intentions before mental illness struck him, but this final volume is indeed chaotic. Its characters and style, its setting and atmosphere have little to do with both previous books. Or maybe it's just me who didn't understand anything, but nevertheless, all I felt was bitter frustration.

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