The Orchid Trilogy

The Military Orchid, A Mine of Serpents, The Goose Cathedral

Jocelyn Brooke author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Pan Macmillan

Published:5th Oct '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Orchid Trilogy cover

A haunting classic of gay literature

A disarming, lyrical hybrid of fiction and autobiography, this forgotten masterpiece of post-war English fiction follows a small boy through his First World War childhood and teenage years on the Kentish coast, then into the army and frontline service in the Second World War.

Obsessed by his strange twin passions for orchids and for fireworks, the author-narrator paints a haunting portrait of a childhood and adulthood interleaved with one another in a near-mystical rural idyll. Defined by his unspoken homosexuality, the books capture the unfolding of a melancholy, often painfully sensitive male consciousness.

First published in the late 1940s as three separate but interlinked volumes – “The Military Orchid”; “A Mine of Serpents” and “The Goose Cathedral” – The Orchid Trilogy conjures up a rapturous, fantastical portrait of England at war and peace in the 20th century. Witty, subtle and deceptively simple, this unjustly neglected classic that has yet to be surpassed in its exploration of the magical world of childhood.

One of those too-rare books whose enjoyability makes it seem too short – Elizabeth Bowen

It is a kind of collage of sharply drawn bits of real life, excellently described and artistically arranged – Stephen Spender

Reminiscence and reflection and description are woven together to make a curious and fascinating tapestry – David Cecil

Mr. Brooke's finely shaped prose, his wit, percipience, and liveliness in the description of people, places, and states of mind are a rare delight – The Scotsman

A sad, funny, densely detailed yet continuously readable experience – The Observer

One of the most exciting creative artists of our time and one who will consistently evade all the literary categories – John Pudney

He is as subtle as the devil -- John Betjeman
One of those too-rare books whose enjoyability makes it seem too short. -- Elizabeth Bowen
It is a kind of collage of sharply drawn bits of real life, excellently described and artistically arranged -- Stephen Spender
One of the notable writers to have surfaced after the war -- Anthony Powell
Reminiscence and reflection and description are woven together to make a curious and fascinating tapestry -- Lord David Cecil
A delight to read * Vogue *
Mr. Brooke's finely shaped prose, his wit, percipience, and liveliness in the description of people, places, and states of mind are a rare delight. * Scotsman *
A work of some stature: informal, charmingly written, quite new in flavour. * Tribune *
A sad, funny, densely detailed yet continuously readable experience -- Anthony Thwaite * Observer *
You have a sense of a man burrowing into the roots of memory itself, the roots of the human race -- P. J. Kavanagh * Spectator *
He had a rare brand of irony, considerable cunning and a marvellous ear for prose . . . Above all, his style runs with easy beauty -- Robin Lane Fox * Financial Times *
One of the most exciting creative artists of our time and one who will consistently evade all the literary categories -- John Pudney

ISBN: 9781509855797

Dimensions: 203mm x 133mm x 26mm

Weight: 517g

456 pages