"Baldridge has achieved something truly
extraordinary. . . . I don't think a finer book on Greene will
be written—or can be."—Frank McConnell
The first critical evaluation of Greene's novels since his
death in 1991, Graham Greene's Fictions: The Virtues of
Extremity is a reconsideration of the author's major
literary achievements, as well as a recasting of his overall
worldview. Hitherto, most criticism of Greene's fiction has
forced him into the constricting category of the "Catholic
novelist," consequently flattening the peaks and valleys of
his uncompromising vision of life. Graham Greene's
Fictions is Cates Baldridge's response to this critical
disservice—an exploration that ignores the conventional
preconceptions about Greene's fiction and reveals him to be
one of the leading British novelists of the twentieth
century.
More than a general assessment, Graham Greene's
Fictions offers a fresh interpretation of familiar texts
and attempts to discover within Greene's work a structure of
thought that has not yet been seen with sufficient clarity.
Each chapter focuses on a major aspect of Greene's vision as
expressed through his novels. Greene's caustic attitude toward
middle-class orthodoxies and his critiques of the three
reigning ideologies of his time--Christianity, Marxism, and
liberalism—are just two of the areas that Baldridge explores. Although five of
Greene's novels are singled out for extensive evaluation—Brighton Rock, The Power and the Glory, The
Heart of the Matter, The Comedians, and The Honorary
Consul—what Baldridge attempts is nothing less than a
comprehensive re-imagination of "Greeneland's" fictional
topography.
Written for both the scholar and the general audience, this
innovative study successfully captures the attention of all
readers whether it is the first or the fifty-first work of
Greene criticism one has read.
About the Author
Cates Baldridge is Associate Professor of English at
Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vermont. He is the author
of The Dialogics of Dissent in the English Novel.