PENGUIN BOOKS

Parade’s End


Ford Madox Ford was born Ford Hermann Hueffer in Merton, Surrey in 1873. He married Elsie Martindale in 1894. His first published works were fairy stories. In 1898 he met Joseph Conrad and they collaborated on several works, including the novels The Inheritors and Romance. He published over eighty books in total, The Fifth Queen appearing in three parts during the period 1907–8. In 1915 he published The Good Soldier, which he regarded as his finest achievement. In the same year he enlisted in the army and served as an infantry officer. Parade’s End, the culmination of his experiences during the First World War, was published in four parts between 1924 and 1928. He moved to Paris in 1922 and two years later founded the transatlantic review, whose contributors included, among others, James Joyce, Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein. In his later years he divided his time between France and America. Ford Madox Ford also published several volumes of autobiography and reminiscence, including Return to Yesterday (1931) and It was the Nightingale (1933), and a final characteristically personal and ambitious volume of criticism, The March of Literature. He died in Deauville in 1939.


Max Saunders is Professor of English at King’s College London, where he teaches modern English, European and American literature. He studied at the universities of Cambridge and Harvard, and was a Research Fellow and then College Lecturer at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He is the author of the two-volume Ford Madox Ford: A Dual Life (Oxford University Press, 1996), the editor of Ford’s Selected Poems and War Prose (Carcanet, 1997 and 1999), and has published essays on Ford, Eliot, Joyce, Lawrence, Freud, Pound, Ruskin and others.

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