
Gorki lotos
The Bitter Lotus (1936) by Pulitzer Prize-winning Louis Bromfield is a kind of "continuation of the fates" of some of the characters from Bromfield's famous novel The Rains Are Coming, but set in a completely new, independent story.
The Bitter Lotus is a novel by Louis Bromfield in which the characters from the famous novel The Rains Are Coming meet in a new story on a tropical island. It follows the tragic love of Tom Dantry and Alix (Lady Groton), their impossible passion, escape from themselves and the bitterness that comes with happiness paid for by someone else's misfortune.
The action takes place on an exotic tropical island in the Indian Ocean, in the remote port of Nivandrum. Tom Dantry, a rich, disappointed and restless American, comes here looking for peace and escape from the past. He soon meets again with the great love of his life – Alix, now married to the rich and ambitious Lord Groton. What begins as a passionate, fatefully inevitable relationship slowly turns into a bitter, destructive relationship full of guilt, jealousy and inner turmoil. Bromfield masterfully shows how even the greatest love can bring misfortune when it is achieved at the expense of someone else's pain.
The novel is rich in exotic descriptions of tropical landscapes, colonial society and psychological portraits of characters. Bromfield opens up themes of fate, responsibility, the transience of happiness and the impossibility of escaping oneself. With a style that is drinkable, dynamic and cinematically picturesque, the writer creates a tense drama that keeps the reader engaged until the end.
The special value of this 1941 edition is represented by the cover – an exceptional photomontage created by Pavle Bihaly, the founder and soul of the Nolit publishing house. Bihaly's photomontage is a combination of artistic avant-garde and commercial appeal typical of the interwar period: dramatic, symbolic and modernly designed, it perfectly reflects the exotic, passionate and somewhat dark atmosphere of the novel. Today, this cover is considered a true bibliophile gem and one of the most successful examples of Yugoslav book design from that period.
Bitter Lotus is a novel about love that burns, about people who have everything and yet cannot be happy. Bromfield shows that wealth, beauty and freedom are no guarantee of happiness if someone else's suffering is hidden behind them. The work is typical of Bromfield's mature style – elegant, melancholic and deeply humanistic. This Nolit edition from 1941 is particularly sought after by collectors due to its historical context (last pre-war years), excellent translation and famous Bihaly cover.
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- Slight damage to the dust jacket





