Sons and Lovers

by David Herbert Lawrence

Published 14 March 2009
D.H. Lawrence's Sons and Lovers (1913) is an autobiographical novel about selfishness and sentimental manipulation set in the mining village of Bestwood. Paul Morel is a young man from a poor family in rural England. The story explores the break-up of husband and wife and a mother's bonds with her sons.

The Rainbow

by David Herbert Lawrence

Published 14 March 2009
David Herbert Lawrence (1885-1930) expected The Rainbow to cause a stir. In a characteristically open exploration of sensual and explicit themes, the novel traces more than sixty years of pre-war life and three generations of the Brangwen family. Employing language infused with the rich imagery and repetition of biblical texts to treat all subjects - from the green fields and empty skies of the Brangwen farm through to Ursula's encounter with a female schoolteacher - Lawrence took an assuredly striking approach. However, he was unprepared for the vitriolic attacks of his reviewers. The novel was branded 'utter filth' and 'a mass of obscenity'; it was banned only a month after its publication in 1915, unsold copies being confiscated and destroyed. A second, abridged edition would not appear for another eleven years. Now a landmark in the early modernist canon, the original and unabridged text of 1915 is reissued here.