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Sleep Has His House (novel)

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Novel by Anna Kavan For the Current 93 album, see Sleep Has His House. For the Scott Barley film, see Sleep Has Her House.

First edition (cover art by Bill English)

Sleep Has His House (first published as The House of Sleep in New York by Doubleday in 1947) is a novel by Anna Kavan. The novel is a dark coming of age narrative, which juxtaposes realistic semi-autobiographical accounting of life, with sections of subconscious wanderings.

According to critic Kate Zambreno, the novel was neither a popular nor critical success, leading to the publisher Jonathan Cape dropping her as one of their authors. Kirkus Review, when reviewing a 1980 reprint of the novel, called its style as having a "dreamlike quality--often beautiful but generally less effective ".

See also

  • Ice, a later novel by Kavan

References

  1. ^ "Review: Sleep has His House by Anna Kavan". Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  2. ^ Zambreno, Kate. "Anna Kavan". Dalkey Archive Press.

Further reading


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