“McGoff didn't have much use for modern Vancouver. According to him, it has a sort of Pango Pango quality mingled with sausage and mash and generally a rather Puritan atmosphere. Everyone fast asleep and when you prick them a Union Jack flows out of the hole. But no one in a certain sense lives there. They merely as it were pass through. Mine the country and quit. Blast the land to pieces, knock down the trees and send them rolling down Burrard Inlet ... As for drinking, by the way, that is beset," Hugh chuckled, "everywhere beset by perhaps favourable difficulties. No bars, only beer parlors so uncomfortable and cold that serve beer so weak no self-respecting drunkard would show his nose in them. You have to drink at home, and when you run short it's too far to get a bottle—”
Quote by Malcolm Lowry
Book:Under the Volcano
Work
Under the Volcano
Under the Volcano is a complex and introspective novel that delves into the psychological and emotional turmoil of its characters. Set against the backdrop of the Mexican Revolution, the story follows the decline of a British diplomat and his wife, whose alcoholism and disillusionment with life are central to the narrative. The novel is renowned for its vivid portrayal of the Mexican landscape and its exploration of themes such as the nature of reality, the destructiveness of addiction, and the search for meaning in a chaotic world. more
Author
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