A collection of three novels by the author who transformed the scope
and style of twentieth-century American literature--including the
landmark classic The Group
In Mary McCarthy's most famous novel, The Group (1963), she depicts
the lives of eight Vassar College graduates during the 1930s as they
grapple with sex, sexism, money, motherhood, and family. McCarthy's
final two novels--Birds of America (1971), a coming of age tale of
19-year-old Peter Levi, who travels to Europe during the 1960s, and
Cannibals and Missionaries (1979), a thriller about a group of
passengers taken hostage on an airplane by militant hijackers--are both
concerned with the state of modern society, from the cross-currents of
radical social change to the psychology of terrorism. As a special
feature, this second volume contains McCarthy's 1979 essay The Novels
that Got Away, on her unfinished fiction.
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