Europe after the Rain takes its title from Max Ernst's surrealist work,
which depicts a vision of rampant destruction - a theme which Burns here
takes to its conclusion, showing man not merely trying to come to terms
with desolation, but combating human cruelty with that resilience of
spirit without which survival would be impossible. The Europe through
which the unnamed narrator travels is a devastated world, twisted and
misshapen, both geographically and morally, and he is forced to witness
terrible sights, to which he brings an interested apathy, without ever
succumbing to despair or cynicism.
Upon the novel's first publication, Burns was heralded as presenting a
picture of his age and capturing the 'collective unconscious' of the
twentieth century - in a language that can have few rivals for economy,
beauty and rhythm. His austere sentences glow with intelligence, colour
and force, and evoke a powerful image for the modern reader of fears
every bit as relevant today as on the day when they were written.