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  1. Wyndham Lewis: Monstre Gai. Though published twenty-seven years after Childermass, the first in this trilogy, this novel takes off from where the previous one left off. At the end of Childermass, Pullman and Sattersthwaite were waiting to get into the Magnetic City, which they thought might be Heaven. Indeed, at the very beginning of this book, ...

  2. Monstre Gai. Wyndham Lewis. 3.94. 16 ratings5 reviews. In the second book of "The Human Age" trilogy Pullman and his ex-school-fag Satterthwaite try to gain admission to the Third City, a purgatorial world beyond the grave, by joining the entourage of a cynical, ambiguous and authoritative figure called the Bailiff.

  3. Dentro de su producción narrativa se cuentan Tarr, ambientada en el París previo a la Primera Guerra Mundial y The Human Age, trilogía que comprende The Childermass (1928), Monstre Gai y Malign Fiesta (ambas de 1955), obra ambientada en el tiempo posterior a la guerra.

  4. Dentro de su producción narrativa se cuentan Tarr, ambientada en el París previo a la Primera Guerra Mundial y The Human Age, trilogía que comprende The Childermass (1928), Monstre Gai y Malign Fiesta (ambas de 1955), obra ambientada en el tiempo posterior a la guerra.

  5. His novels include Tarr (1918) and The Human Age trilogy, composed of The Childermass (1928), Monstre Gai (1955) and Malign Fiesta (1955). A fourth volume, titled The Trial of Man , was unfinished at the time of his death.

  6. Monstre Gai. by Wyndham Lewis. 3.94 · 16 Ratings · 5 Reviews · published 1955 · 6 editions. In the second book of "The Human Age" trilogy Pull… Want to Read. Rate it: Book 3. Malign Fiesta. by Wyndham Lewis. 3.77 · 13 Ratings · 2 Reviews · published 1955 · 3 editions. The third novel in Lewis' Human Age series takes u… Want to Read. Rate it:

  7. I hope that after Monstre Gai and its successor (for we are promised a third volume of this vast supernatural saga) have been assimilated, The Childermass may be re-published without further delay. I write "after" with some emphasis; having re-read The Childermass after reading Monstre Gai , I believe the sequel to be a better introduction to its forerunner, than the other way about.