Author | A. S. M. Hutchinson |
---|---|
Language | English |
Publisher | Little, Brown and Company (United States), Hodder & Stoughton (United Kingdom) |
Publication date | 1921 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
If Winter Comes is a novel by A. S. M. Hutchinson, first published in 1921. It deals with an unhappy marriage, eventual divorce, and an unwed mother who commits suicide. It was a bestseller on publication and was adapted into film in 1923 and 1947.
The title of the novel was taken from the last line of the Percy Bysshe Shelley poem "Ode to the West Wind": "If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?". [1] [2]
The story is the life of Mark Sabre, a middle-aged and upstanding man, but one who is much maligned. Sabre is presented as Christlike in terms of the unjustified persecution he faces. [3] Sabre enlists during World War I, he is badly injured, and he returns to his loveless marriage to his shrewish wife Mabel. Sabre gets into trouble when he tries to help Effie, an unwed mother, who is assumed to be his mistress. He is divorced, loses his job, and scandal follows when Effie kills herself.
If Winter Comes presents sensational and controversial subjects of emotional adultery, unwed motherhood and suicide, but tempers them with moral, social and religious idealism. [4]
The character of Rev Cyril Boom Bagshaw was a satire of the flamboyant Rev Basil Bourchier. [5]
The novel was published serially in Everybody's Magazine between December 1920 and July 1921. [6] It was then published simultaneously by Little, Brown and Company in the United States and Hodder & Stoughton in the United Kingdom. [7] After publication as a novel, it was serialized in Britain from August 1922 to March 1923 in Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper . [8]
It made the Publishers Weekly best seller list for 1922, [9] and according to The New York Times, If Winter Comes was the best-selling book in the United States for all of that year. [10] A tie-in edition was published in 1947 at the time of the second film, and a paperback version was published in the 1960s, but it eventually lapsed into near-complete obscurity'. [11]
George Orwell included In Winter Comes as one of the books with no literary pretensions but which remains readable in his 1945 essay "Good Bad Books". [12]
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