Goodbye to Elsa
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
Goodbye to Elsa is a richly entertaining satirical novel. It is at the same time an acute study of the loneliness of the individual trying to relate himself to his fellow men.
Tristan, who tells his own story, is an Assistant Professor of History. Having gone blind in one eye, he leaves his wife, Elsa, and his son, both of whom he detests, and hides in a deserted farm-house with the intention of killing himself. Here he recalls his life, particularly his love life in India, England and Canada — a series of disappointments and persecutions. While meticulously preparing to put an end to his sufferings he meets Marie, the daughter of a grocer, who offers him love and understanding and encourages him to face life. Tristan responds to the challenge, but his response, like much else of what he does, is distorted by his conviction that he has a Messianic role to play . . . and the outcome is very different from anything he had envisaged.
REVIEWS
"Funny, full of bite" — The Times (London)
“Cowasjee knows how to tell a story and handles his language admirably.” — Khushwant Singh
“Entirely original and elegantly written. Goodbye to Elsa is a deadly serious comedy... In many ways this brilliant novel is a hymn to women, in others a funny and sophisticated revelation of British Empire man.” — The Listener (London)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Saros Cowasjee is Professor Emeritus of the University of Regina in Canada.
His writings include the novels Goodbye to Elsa (1974) and My Dear Maura (2005), critical studies on Sean O'Casey and Mulk Raj Anand, and several anthologies of fiction. The latter include Oxford Anthology of Raj Stories (2001) and The Mulk Raj Anand Omnibus (2004). His latest is a collection of his own short fiction entitled Strange Meeting and Other Stories (2006).