Description
About the Author
A. E. Ellis was the pseudonym of playwright and novelist, Derek Lindsay, who was born in 1920. Orphaned at the age of three, he was brought up by an aunt. After serving in World War II, during which Lindsay rose to become a captain, he returned to England and attended Oxford University. When he was stricken with tuberculosis, Lindsay entered a sanatorium in the Alps, where the years of his slow cure would provide the inspiration for his only published novel, 'The Rack'. The book received great acclaim on its publication.
Reviews
There are certain books which we call great for want of a better term, that rise like monuments above the cemeteries of literature: - 'The Rack', to my mind is one of this company. Graham Greene; Penelope Mortimer wrote: 'It is often glibly said that a work of art is an experience - 'The Rack' is one of the rare instances of this actually being so. It is a book which must, inevitably, have a permanent effect on the reader. In this case the usual terms of praise become almost meaningless. So powerful is Mr Ellis's inspiration, so driven by the urgent necessity of expression, that one is not so much conscious of having read an account of an ordeal as of having lived through two years of unbearable physical and mental agony - and survived.'
Book Information
ISBN 9781853981609
Author A.E. Ellis
Format Paperback
Page Count 388
Imprint Ashgrove Publishing Ltd
Publisher Ashgrove Publishing Ltd