Описание книги
 The Trojan legend and the character of Helen form the basis for  The Bite of the Night . As with all Barker’s mythical and historical works, it is overlaid and undermined by a contemporary narrative, in this instance the search for the origin of the erotic undertaken by the redundant university teacher Dr Savage and his nihilistic student, Hogbin. Through all twelve Troys, Savage and Helen struggle with a passion both intellectual and physical, and the idea of beauty is refined to a terrifying degree.   In Brutopia  Barker’s controversial portrait of the humanist Thomas More is shaped around his strained relationship with his daughter Cecilia, here discovered to be the author of a counter-text to her parent’s infamous  Utopia . Cecilia’s wit and cruelty mark her out as one of Barker’s least compromising and heroic young women.   The Forty  is a significant departure from Barker’s dramatic practice, his investment in language reduced to a few phrases which punctuate  detailed scenes of conflict and solitude. Physical movement, and intense concentration on gesture show the author’s flair for visuality in  a new and surprising way.  The theme of sacrifice features increasingly in Barker’s theatre, and in  Wonder and Worship in the Dying Ward  it is a mother’s refusal to apologize for an act of passion – notwithstanding the dire consequence for her own child – that is at the heart of the argument. Set in a home for terminally-ill patients, many of whom create a hilarious chorus around  the protagonists,  Wonder and Worship in the Dying Ward  shows Barker’s imagination in its most startling form.                 
            