Synopses & Reviews
Written during the most flourishing period of D. H. Lawrence's career,
The Plumed Serpent is a novel of ritual and romance set in Mexico during the 1920s, a story both beautiful and strange.
Kate Leslie, an Irishwoman, is at once repelled and fascinated by the spell of Mexico, homesick and yet unable to leave. With the ancient rites of the lost god Quetzalcoatl, she marries Don Cipriano, an Indian, and becomes wedded not only to him but also to a history full of terror and blood, to a land without shadows or mist.
Review
"Lawrence writes on rebirth and reflects on the ambience of Mexico and New Mexico in this 1926 novel of a woman whose passions inspire her to flee an unexciting husband." Publishers Weekly
Review
"All of Mexico is here, evoked clearly with the fervor of things remembered out of impressions that filled the mind to bursting." Katherine Anne Porter
Synopsis
The story of a European woman's self-annihilating plunge into the intrigues, passions, and pagan rituals of Mexico. Lawrence's mesmerizing and unsettling 1926 novel is his great work of the political imagination.
Synopsis
From one of the greatest--and most controversial--writers of the 20th century comes a mesmerizing work of political imagination about a European woman's self-annihilating plunge into the intrigues, passions, and pagan rituals of Mexico.
About the Author
Lawrence was a novelist, short-story writer, poet, and critic. Born in Nottinghamshire, England.