

Gormenghast is a novel of growing up… Gormenghast is a parable of rebellion – if the putrid traditions turn into a garrote and become the personification of evil, they must be demolished…

These quicks of sentience owe nothing to his forbears, but to those feckless hosts, a trillion deep, of the globe’s childhood. A ritual of the blood of the jumping blood. For first and ever foremost he is child.Ī ritual, more compelling than ever man devised, is fighting anchored darkness. Suckled on shadows weaned, as it were, on webs of ritual: for his ears, echoes, for his eyes, a labyrinth of stone: and yet within his body something other – other than this umbrageous legacy. Gormenghast is written with the mysterious and magical language… Gormenghast is a tale of mysteries… Gormenghast is a story of magic… His works are now included in the collections of the National Portrait Gallery and the Imperial War Museum. Although he gained little popular success in his lifetime, his work was highly respected by his peers, and his friends included Dylan Thomas and Graham Greene. A collection of these drawings is still in the possession of his family. Peake first made his reputation as a painter and illustrator during the 1930s and 1940s, when he lived in London, and he was commissioned to produce portraits of well-known people.

Peake also wrote poetry and literary nonsense in verse form, short stories for adults and children ("Letters from a Lost Uncle"), stage and radio plays, and Mr Pye, a relatively tightly-structured novel in which God implicitly mocks the evangelical pretensions and cosy world-view of the eponymous hero. Tolkien, but his surreal fiction was influenced by his early love for Charles Dickens and Robert Louis Stevenson rather than Tolkien's studies of mythology and philology. They are sometimes compared to the work of his older contemporary J.R.R. He is best known for what are usually referred to as the Gormenghast books, though the Titus books would be more accurate: the three works that exist were the beginning of what Peake conceived as a lengthy cycle, following his protagonist Titus Groan from cradle to grave, but Peake's untimely death prevented completion of the cycle, which is now commonly but erroneously referred to as a trilogy. Mervyn Laurence Peake was an English modernist writer, artist, poet and illustrator.
