Erb

Erb

by W. Pett Ridge
Erb

Erb

by W. Pett Ridge

Paperback

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Overview

313 Pageds. Complete & Unabridged!

The Mr. Pett Ridge is a capital humourist, and incomparable in his own way as an observer of the characteristics of the lower middle classes, their pathetic little bits of pride, their harmless vanities, and the odd manners, which do not irritate us, because we look on them from a distance. He is at his best in short studies: his method is hardly broad enough, nor his material rich enough for a novel. There is much that is improbable and far-fetched in his descriptions, when he ventures outside the world he knows so well. He is more at home in Bermondsey than in Eaton Square. The character of "Erb" otherwise Herbert Barnes, carman, Socialist leader, park orator, and labour agitator, is admirably drawn and developed, within its natural limitations, throughout the whole book. He is not altogether pleasant, being pathetically vulgar, in spite of his intelligence, his quick perceptions, and his quiet self-respect. The offensiveness of the cockney is in no way softened, the irritating style of repartee, the defiant assurance that is at heart so ill at ease in the presence of superiors, all the half-touching, half-humorous weaknesses of his class are in "Erb". But he has brains, and the power of influencing men, and a fine sense of honour, and we leave him at the end of the book, cultivating the aspiration of his "h's" under the guidance of the charming teacher of elocution who becomes his wife; a very much pleasanter if less ambitious "Erb" than at the beginning. Louisa, Erb's sister, an honest, self-denying, sharp-tongued, vulgar little factory girl, is a creation of which any author might well be proud.

—The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art, Volume 96 [1904]

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781663515308
Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press
Publication date: 06/10/2020
Pages: 314
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

W. Pett Ridge (1859–1930), English author, was born at Chartham, near Canterbury, Kent, on 22 April 1859, and was educated at Marden, Kent, and at the Birkbeck Institute, London. Pett Ridge was a compassionate man, giving generously of both his time and money to charity. He founded the Babies Home at Hoxton in 1907 and was an ardent supporter of many organisations that had the welfare of children as their object. This charitable zeal, and the fact that he established himself as the leading novelist of London life and character, led to him being characterised as the natural successor of Dickens. All his friends considered Pett Ridge to be one of life's natural bachelors. They were rather surprised therefore in 1909 when he married Olga Hentschel. Four of his books, including Mord Em'ly, were adapted as films in the early 1920s, all with scripts by Eliot Stannard.
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