Alexandria: A History and Guide
By (Author) E.M. Forster
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
1st October 2019
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Middle Eastern history
African history: pre-colonial period
African history
Classic travel writing
General and world history
Travel guides: museums, historic sites, galleries etc
Archaeology by period / region
Autobiography: writers
916.21
Paperback
320
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
254g
In the autumn of 1915, in a "slightly heroic mood", E.M. Forster arrived in Alexandria, full of lofty ideals as a volunteer for the Red Cross. Yet most of his time was spent exploring "the magic, antiquity and complexity" of the place in order to cope with living in what he saw as a "funk-hole". With a novelist's pen, he brings to life the fabled, romantic city of Alexander the Great, capital of Graeco-Roman Egypt, beacon of light and culture symbolised by the Pharos, where the doomed love affair of Antony and Cleopatra was played out and the greatest library the world has ever known was built. Threading 3,000 years of history with vibrant strands of literature and punctuating the narrative with his own experiences, Forster immortalised Alexandria, painting an incomparable portrait of the great city and, inadvertently, himself.
E.M. Forster (1879-1970) was perhaps the most quintessential of English novelists. From the stifling drawing rooms of Howard's End to the dust and dark undercurrents of Passage to India, he captured the spirit of his time in a way that has made his six novels unforgettable and much-loved classics.