Synopses & Reviews
In
Bedlam Burning,
Geoff Nicholson turns his satirical gaze to the ivy covered walls of academia and the rubber rooms of an insane asylum. It all starts at Cambridge University, in the rooms of Dr. John Bentley, a don famous for his book burning parties-"a little, active symbolic literary criticism"-where guests are invited to incinerate books.
It is at one such party that Gregory Collins, brilliant but unprepossessing, meets Mike Smith, a handsome classmate. When Collins's first novel, The Wax Man, is accepted for publication, he convinces Smith to take his place on the book jacket. As a result, it is Smith rather than Collins who receives the offer to be writer-in-residence at the asylum run by Dr. James Kincaid, whose obscure therapeutic philosophy centers on the soothing powers of literature. When Smith compiles a book of the inmates' writings, and it becomes a literary success, this comedy of errors threatens to become a tragedy.
Review
"Nicholson shows remarkable economy in the construction of his narrative....The prose retains a cool, unobtrusive style which counterbalances the manic happenings of the plot...Bedlam Burning is genuinely comic, and genuinely serious....Nicholson has managed to create an acidic and intelligent novel of ideas and idiots." Scotland on Sunday
Review
"One of English literature's premier purveyors of black humor" Time Out
Synopsis
It all starts at Cambridge University, in the rooms of Dr. John Bentley, a don famous for his book burning parties-a little, active symbolic literary criticism-where guests are invited to incinerate books. It is at one such party that Gregory Collins, brilliant but unprepossessing, meets Mike Smith, a handsome classmate. When Collins's first novel, The Wax Man, is accepted for publication, he convinces Smith to take his place on the book jacket. As a result, it is Smith rather than Collins who receives the offer to be writer-in-residence at the asylum run by Dr. James Kincaid, whose obscure therapeutic philosophy centers on the soothing powers of literature. When Smith compiles a book of the inmates' writings, and it becomes a literary success, this comedy of errors threatens to become a tragedy.
About the Author
Geoff Nicholson is the author of thirteen novels, including Bleeding London, which was shortlisted for the Whitbread Prize. His works have been translated into French, German, Italian, Spanish, and Japanese. Film rights to Bedlam Burning have been optioned by New Line Cinema.