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The Iris Trilogy

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The Iris Trilogy Synopsis

Dame Iris Murdoch (1919-1999) was one of the greatest British novelists and philosophers of the twentieth century. She read philosophy at Oxford where she met and later married John Bayley, a literary critic and fellow novelist. So began a forty-year, intense and unconventional but happy marriage, detailed in the classic bestselling memoir Iris. Despite Iris' extramarital affairs with men and women throughout their long marriage - which John always suspected - their bond was unbreakable, and his memoir beautifully captures their child-like moments of bliss: walking in forests, swimming together in streams, and sharing hot cups of coffee on crisp mornings.

These are touching but poignant stories with the knowledge that Iris and her grand intellect would eventually succumb to Alzheimer's disease. John would care for her singlehandedly for five years, the last of which he writes about in Iris and the Friends that also describes her peaceful passing. Finally, he reflects on his bereavement and the void that is left when a soulmate departs in A Widower's House. All three books are told by the person who knew Iris best, with gentle humour - at times unbearably moving - in his portrayal of a remarkable woman.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780715653968
Publication date: 12th November 2020
Author: John Bayley, John Bayley
Publisher: Duckworth an imprint of Duckworth Books
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 512 pages
Genres: Biography: writers
Gender studies: women and girls
Coping with Alzheimer’s and dementia
Coping with death and bereavement
Alzheimer’s and dementia
Women’s health
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary reference works
Narrative theme: Death, grief, loss