The Great Pursuit Read Online Free

The Great Pursuit
Book: The Great Pursuit Read Online Free
Author: Tom Sharpe
Tags: Fiction:Humour
Pages:
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There he retraced his route, stopped

at several eminent publishing houses for consideration, and travelled on. What Pause O Men for

the Virgin needed was a publisher with an excellent reputation to give it the imprimatur of

respectability. Frensic narrowed them down and finally made up his mind. It would be a gamble but

it would be a gamble that was worth taking. He would have to have Sonia Futtle's opinion

first.
    She gave it to him over lunch in a little Italian restaurant where Frensic entertained his

less important authors.
    'A weird book,' she said.
    'Quite,' said Frensic.
    'But it's got something. Compassionate,' said Sonia, wanning to her task.
    'I agree.'
    'Deeply insightful.'
    'Definitely.'
    'Good story line.'
    'Excellent.'
    'Significant,' said Sonia.
    Frensic sighed. It was the word he had been waiting for. 'You really think that?'
    'I do. I mean it. I think it's really got something. It's good. I really do.'
    'Well,' said Frensic doubtfully, 'I may be an anachronism but...'
    'You're role-playing again. Be serious.'
    'My dear,' said Frensic, 'I am being serious. If you say that stuff is significant I am

delighted. It's what I thought you'd say. It means it will appeal to those intellectual

flagellants who can't enjoy a book unless it hurts. That I happen to know that, from a genuinely

literary standpoint, it is an abomination is perhaps beside the point but I am entitled to

protect my instincts.'
    'Instincts? No man had fewer.'
    'Literary instincts,' said Frensic. 'And they tell me that this is a bad, pretentious book and

that it will sell. It combines a filthy story with an even filthier style.'
    'I didn't see anything wrong with the style,' said Sonia.
    'Of course you didn't. You're an American and Americans aren't burdened by our classical

inheritance. You can't see that there is a world of difference between Dreiser and Mencken or Tom

Wolfe and Bellow. That's your prerogative. I find such lack of discrimination invaluable and most

reassuring. If you accept sentences endlessly convoluted, spattered with commas and tied into

knots with parentheses, unrelated verbs and qualifications of qualifications, and which, to

parody, have, if they are to be at all comprehended, to be read at least four times with the aid

of a dictionary, who am I to quarrel with you? Your fellow-countrymen, whose rage for

self-improvement I have never appreciated, are going to love this book.'
    'They may not go such a ball on the story line. I mean it's been done before you know. Harold

and Maude?
    'But never in such exquisitely nauseating detail,' said Frensic and sipped his wine. 'And not

with Lawrentian overtones. Besides that's our trump. Seventeen loves eighty. The liberation of

the senile. What could be more significant than that? By the way when is Hutchmeyer due in

London?'
    'Hutchmeyer? You've got to be kidding,' said Sonia. Frensic held up a piece of ravioli in

protest.
    'Don't use that expression. I am not a goat.'
    'And Hutchmeyer's not the Olympia Press. He's strictly middlebrow. He wouldn't touch this

book.'
    'He would if we baited the trap right,' said Frensic.
    'Trap?' said Sonia suspiciously. 'What trap?'
    'I was thinking of a very distinguished London publisher to take the book first,' said

Frensic, 'and then you sell the American rights to Hutchmeyer.'
    'Who?'
    'Corkadales,' said Frensic.
    Sonia shook her head. 'Corkadales are far too old and stodgy.'
    'Precisely,' said Frensic. 'They are prestigious. They are also broke.'
    'They should have dropped half their list years ago,' said Sonia.
    They should have dropped Sir Clarence years ago. You read his obituary?' But Sonia hadn't.
    'Most entertaining. And instructive. Tributes galore to his service to Literature, by which

they meant he had subsidized more unread poets and novelists than any other publisher in London.

The result: they are now broke.'
    'In which case they can hardly afford to buy Pause O Men for the
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