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Those barren leaves

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About This Book

The novel satirizes a cultured circle gathered at a grand hilltop Italian palazzo where an English hostess assembles artists, critics, and socialites whose ornate conversation and aesthetic posturing mask personal vanity and spiritual barrenness. Episodes center on an evening of entertaining, a fictional-autobiographical fragment, romantic entanglements among guests, a contested journey, and a final series of conclusions that interrogate art, taste, and sincerity. Through witty exchanges, caricatured personalities, and shifting narrative forms, the work exposes the gulf between cultivated ideas and lived feeling, questioning whether aestheticism offers genuine meaning or merely decorous escape.

About the Author

Huxley, Aldous portrait

Aldous Huxley

Aldous Huxley was an English writer and philosopher, best known for his dystopian novel "Brave New World," which explores themes of technological advancement, societal control, and human conditioning. Born into a prominent family in 1894, Huxley was educated at Oxford and became a significant figure in 20th-century literature. His works often blend satire, science fiction, and philosophical inquiry, reflecting his concerns about modernity and the human condition. In addition to "Brave New World," Huxley wrote notable works such as "Crome Yellow" and "Antic Hay," showcasing his keen observations of society and culture. His literary contributions continue to resonate, prompting discussions about ethics, freedom, and the future.

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