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  1. While Inside Mr. Enderby (1963) may not convey equally powerful artistic vision, it is still a remarkable novel and, to me, it deserves almost as high a rating. A truly magnificent chapter opens the novel. Children from the future, on their Educational Time Trip, visit a great poet of the past, a Mr. Enderby, who is sleeping in his rented flat.

  2. Inside Mr. Enderby 4 stars - I thought this was a wonder when I read it in 1997. Burgess is for word lovers. One of the things that makes him funny is his insertion of the perfect overwrought word at the right moment. His gift very much reminds me of Martin Amis's work, ...

  3. Home » England » Anthony Burgess » Inside Mr. Enderby . Anthony Burgess: Inside Mr. Enderby. Though this story is about a not very successful poet, it is surprisingly similar to A Clockwork Orange, at least in theme.Like Alex, Mr. Enderby – we never know his first name, though his wife briefly endows him the name of Harry – clearly does not fit into society.

  4. Inside Mr. Enderby (Penguin Books. No. 2400.) by Anthony Burgess and a great selection of related books, art and collectibles available now at AbeBooks.com.

  5. 1 de ene. de 1996 · There is, though, a problem that another reviewer has pointed out - The problem of identifying with either Enderby or Burgess - or perhaps Enderburgess. The first two books, Inside Mr. Enderby and Enderby Outside, are much superior, in my mind, to the last two books. Here, Enderby is a character separate from Burgess.

  6. 29 de dic. de 2015 · Inside Mr. Enderby introduced to a captivated audience Burgess's dyspeptic poet, whose uniquely idiosyncratic, scatological brand of verse even won the genuine approval of T. S. Eliot. In his first clash with the outside world, Enderby is extracted from his lavatorial sanctuary by the professional widow Vesta Bainbridge in a most peculiar romance.

  7. Inside Mr. Enderby introduces us to our slatternly hero. Francis Xavier Enderby is 45, lives alone in a dodgy flat in a southern seaside town of Hove in England, and writes poetry full time. He is able to do this because of an inheritance he received upon the death of his foul, domineering stepmother, a woman he loathed and whom he blames for a variety of his problems, including sexual impotence.