The Nice and the Good

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Nice_and_the_Good an entity of type: Thing

اللطيف والطيب (بالإنجليزية: The Nice and the Good)‏ هي رواية للكاتبة البريطانية آيريس مردوك، نشرت عام 1968، لأول مرة عن دار نشر . rdf:langString
The Nice and the Good is a novel by Iris Murdoch. Published in 1968, it was her eleventh novel. The Nice and the Good was shortlisted for the 1969 Booker Prize. The novel combines elements of the thriller and romantic comedy genres. It begins with the suicide of Joseph Radeechy, a civil servant, in his London office. His department head, Octavian Gray, asks John Ducane, the department's legal advisor, to investigate. Ducane soon discovers that Radeechy was a practitioner of black magic and that he was being blackmailed. His investigations threaten to implicate Richard Biranne, another senior member of the department. rdf:langString
rdf:langString اللطيف والطيب (رواية)
rdf:langString The Nice and the Good
rdf:langString The Nice and the Good
rdf:langString The Nice and the Good
xsd:string Chatto & Windus
xsd:integer 44073292
xsd:integer 1082819133
rdf:langString First edition cover
rdf:langString United Kingdom
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Print
xsd:integer 457613
xsd:integer 349
xsd:integer 1968
rdf:langString اللطيف والطيب (بالإنجليزية: The Nice and the Good)‏ هي رواية للكاتبة البريطانية آيريس مردوك، نشرت عام 1968، لأول مرة عن دار نشر .
rdf:langString The Nice and the Good is a novel by Iris Murdoch. Published in 1968, it was her eleventh novel. The Nice and the Good was shortlisted for the 1969 Booker Prize. The novel combines elements of the thriller and romantic comedy genres. It begins with the suicide of Joseph Radeechy, a civil servant, in his London office. His department head, Octavian Gray, asks John Ducane, the department's legal advisor, to investigate. Ducane soon discovers that Radeechy was a practitioner of black magic and that he was being blackmailed. His investigations threaten to implicate Richard Biranne, another senior member of the department. A parallel plot details the complex romantic relationships among the residents and guests at Octavian Gray's seaside country house. These include Octavian's wife Kate, with whom Ducane is carrying on an intense platonic relationship, and Paula Biranne, Richard Biranne's ex-wife, who lives there with her two children. Also in residence is Mary Clothier, a widowed friend of the family whose teenaged son Pierce is in love with Octavian's 14-year-old daughter. Pierce's despair over Barbara's indifference leads him to swim into an underwater cave, endangering his own life and that of Ducane, who tries to rescue him. The novel ends with most of the characters paired off and a spirit of general reconciliation. Aside from Radeechy's attempts at magic, the novel's many supernatural elements include a flying saucer sighting and Ducane's shapeshifting manservant, who claims to be the son of a mermaid. Many of the characters, especially Ducane, are concerned about the morality of their actions, reflecting Iris Murdoch's philosophical interest in the subject. Critics were divided over the novel's philosophical elements, which were praised by A. S. Byatt while Elizabeth Janeway found them uninteresting.
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