Hailed by his famous contemporaries including Edith Wharton, H.G. Wells,
Katherine Mansfield, Graham Greene, and Evelyn Waugh, who called him a
genius, William Gerhardie is one of the twentieth century's forgotten
masters, and his lovely comedy Futility one of the century's neglected
masterpieces.
It tells the story of someone very similar to Gerhardie himself: a young
Englishman raised in Russia who returns to St. Petersburg and falls in
love with the daughter of a hilariously dysfunctional family--all played
out with the armies of the Russian Revolution marching back and forth
outside the parlor window.
Part British romantic comedy, part Russian social realism, and with a
large cast of memorable characters, this astoundingly funny and poignant
novel is the tale of people persisting in love and hope despite the
odds.