Cakes and Ale, or, the Skeleton in the Cupboard. Illustrated

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By W. Somerset Maugham

cover image of Cakes and Ale, or, the Skeleton in the Cupboard. Illustrated

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W. Somerset Maugham's Cakes and Ale (1930) is one of his most witty, ironic, and enduring novels, often regarded as a sharp satire of literary society and its pretensions. Blending humor, keen observation, and social critique, Maugham dissects the world of authors, critics, and publishers, while at the same time offering a poignant meditation on truth, memory, and the complexity of human relationships. The story is narrated by William Ashenden, a writer who is asked to contribute material for the official biography of Edward Driffield, a once-radical novelist who has since become enshrined as a literary icon. Through Ashenden's recollections, however, a very different Edward Driffield emerges — one deeply tied to his first wife, Rosie, a woman whose scandalous vitality and unapologetic sensuality stand in stark contrast to the sanitized image being constructed by polite society. At the heart of the novel is Rosie Driffield, one of Maugham's most vivid and memorable characters. Irrepressible, generous, and free-spirited, she becomes both a muse and a symbol of unvarnished humanity, challenging the hypocrisies of respectability and the artificiality of "literary reputation." Her portrait reveals Maugham's mastery at blending satire with compassion. Cakes and Ale is more than a literary satire — it is also a reflection on the gap between public myth and private truth, and on the enduring power of honesty in a world prone to pretense. Sparkling with wit and insight, it remains one of Maugham's finest achievements, a novel as biting as it is humane.
Cakes and Ale, or, the Skeleton in the Cupboard. Illustrated