Mr Noon is a sardonic tale about the amorous adventures of Gilbert Noon,
a young schoolmaster in Lawrence's home county of Nottinghamshire who
gets entangled with a girl, loses his job, and decides to leave the
country to escape the narrow provincial middle-class morality. It was
first known as a long story posthumously published in A Modern Lover
(1934) and collected in the volume called Phoenix II (1968). Lawrence in
fact wrote a long continuation of the novel, but the manuscript
disappeared for many years. The Cambridge edition brought the two parts
together for the first time. It is like a sequel to Sons and Lovers, but
much more straightforwardly autobiographical. The publication of the
complete work added a new work of major importance to the canon of a
great writer, and was widely hailed as a major literary event.