
Put u visoko društvo
Joe Lampton, an ambitious working-class young man, arrives in Warley and chooses between passionate love with Alice and marriage to Susan, a wealthy woman, for the sake of social advancement. Ambition comes at a heavy price.
The Road to High Society (1957) is the first and most famous novel by John Braine, a classic of British literature of the Angry Young Men movement. The story takes place in post-war England, in the Yorkshire town of Warley.
The main character, 25-year-old Joe Lampton, comes from a working-class family in Dufton. After the war, he works as an accountant in the city government and is determined to make it to the top. He settles in a more affluent part of town and joins an amateur theater, where he meets two women: the young and naive Susan Brown, the daughter of a wealthy industrialist, and the older, married Alice Aisgill.
Joe truly loves Alice, but Susan represents for him a ticket to high society – money, status and a good job. Torn between love and ambition, he ultimately chooses the more practical path: he becomes engaged to Susan (who becomes pregnant), breaks up with Alice and accepts a lucrative job in her father's company. Alice ends tragically, and Joe remains rich, but broken and aware of the moral cost of his rise.
The novel sharply criticizes class society, social mobility and the emptiness of material success. Joe is a typical "angry young man" - rebellious, calculating and ready to sacrifice love for status. The work is raw, realistic and psychologically convincing, and in 1959 it was successfully made into a film. A classic that still asks the question today: is the "room at the top" worth the lost happiness?
Two copies are available
Copy number 2
- Slight damage to the dust jacket





