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Not Honour More

(Book #3 in the The Second Trilogy Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Acceptable

$7.99
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Book Overview

Not Honour More is the third novel in the second trilogy, or triptych to use Cary's preferred term. The first two are The Prisoner of Grace and Except the Lord, in that order. All are reissued in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Third in a trilogy

The is the last volume in Joyce Cary's political trilogy, a trilogy that revolves around a trilogy of closely related characters, Nina and the two men in her life, Chester Nimmo and Jim Latter. The second volume was Chester's story; this volume tells Jim's. He is a spoiled, domineering man who refuses to marry Nina after getting her pregnant because he thinks it will ruin his chances for advancement in his army regiment; when Chester steps in and asks her to marry him, she accepts - to Jim's bitter regret. Much of his story is filled with anger toward Chester, who is a politician; he comes to view Chester as a political monster set on destroying the world, but that only disguises his real anger at Chester, which has everything to do with his relationship with Nina. Jim even tries to shoot Chester at one point. The novel is set during the General Strike in England in 1926, when laborers throughout Britain went on strike in sympathy with striking coal miners. It's this strike that gives Jim the excuse to rationalize much of his behavior, especially his eventual murder of Nina, which he claims he did to "save England." Jim is totally delusional by this time, wallowing in the juices of his own anger and frustrations. But Cary is careful not to make Jim a monster, and the reader is able to feel sympathy for his behavior. The story is told by Jim and it is clear in the voice that Cary gives him how angry and cynical he is. His voice is often clipped and fragmented, as if spitting out his vindictiveness for all the world to see. (He tells it as a prisoner making a statement, waiting to be hanged.) His voice is strong and speaks directly to the reader. The book is compelling though pessimistic, with the political avenue toward better living potholed and rocky. Cary believed that political compromise between left and right, liberal and conservative, was the only way for politics to have any meaning. The fact that it's a compromise is a downer for him, and that tone is reflected in the book. The whole trilogy is powerful and an interesting read.
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