One of Brave New World author Aldous Huxley's finest and most
personal novels, now back in print in a Harper Perennial Modern Classics
edition, Eyeless in Gaza is the story of one man's quest to find a
meaningful life, which leads him from blind hedonism to political
revolution to spiritual enlightenment.
"A genius . . . a writer who spent his lifetime decrying the onward
march of the Machine." -- The New Yorker
First published in 1936--and hailed as his best work--EYELESS IN GAZA is
Aldous Huxley's loosely autobiographical novel of one man's search for
an alternative to the moral disillusionment of the modern world. Anthony
Beavis, a cynical libertine Oxford graduate, comes of age in the vacuum
left by World War I. His life, loves, and foreign adventures leave him
unfulfilled, until he meets a charismatic doctor who inspires Anthony to
become a Marxist and join the Mexican revolution--a disastrous embrace
of violence that leaves the doctor with one leg. Shattered by the
experience, Anthony forges a new, quasi-Buddhist philosophy that
embraces pacifism. EYELESS IN GAZA remains one of Huxley's most enduring
novels, a testament to the challenges and rewards of bold, vigorous
thinking.