Hailed by the Washington Post Book World as "a modern classic," Robertson Davies's acclaimed Deptford Trilogy is a glittering, fantastical, cunningly contrived series of novels, around which a mysterious death is woven. The Manticore--the second book in the series after Fifth Business--follows David Staunton, a man pleased with his success but haunted by his relationship with his larger-than-life father. As he seeks help through therapy, he encounters a wonderful cast of characters who help connect him to his past and the death of his father.
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"I am an American, Chicago born—Chicago that somber city..." A novel, MEISELMAN: THE LEAN YEARS, out now from @TortoiseBooks.
"People jeer at first love, and in ridiculous people it is certainly ridiculous." —Robertson Davies, THE MANTICORE
Freelance journalist writing for @TIME, @nytimes, @afarmedia and @vanityfair | Co-founder of @BordCPH
@weischoice Robertson Davies' The Manticore has always made me want to go into full-bore Jungian analysis, preferably in Zurich. It's also a fantastic novel.
Co-founder of @LadderOrg, a nonprofit working to make creative careers more accessible and inclusive.
Mine is from Robertson Davies' The Manticore, when a kid hears his philandering dad get called a "swordsman," slang for a guy sleeping around. He thinks it sounds cool and starts excitedly telling everyone his dad's a swordsman, not noticing everyone responding like 😳
"The Deptford Trilogy boldly commingles the extraordinary and the everyday, at times attaining what Davies once called, in talking about melodrama, 'the compelling immediacy of a dream.'"
--Michael Dirda
"Robertson Davies is one of the great modern novelists."
--Malcolm Bradbury, The Sunday Times (London)
"Robertson Davies is a novelist whose books are thick and rich with humor, character and incident. They are plotted with skill and much flamboyance."
--The Observer (London)