The Devil's Mode

The Devil's Mode (1989) is the only collection of short stories by the English author Anthony Burgess.

The stories included are varied in their settings and themes and display Burgess's characteristic wide range, while touching on such themes as the private life of Shakespeare, which he speculated on in his novel Nothing Like the Sun, and the lives of British expatriates in the Far East, explored by Burgess in his Malayan trilogy.

Contents

Reception

The collection received mixed to negative reviews. Helen Benedict, writing for the New York Times, writing "his first collection of short stories reads as if he had dashed them off in his bathtub". Benedict wrote positively about A Meeting in Valladolid, 1889 and the Devil's Mode, and Hun, but found the other stories to be hollow. Kirkus Reviews described the collection as "scraps from the master's table". A reviewer for Library Journal wrote "In this moderately diverting collection, mild irony and witty erudition fail to disguise a want of feeling."

References


Uses material from the Wikipedia article The Devil's Mode, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.