
In the United States, Brideshead Revisited was the Book of the Month Club selection for January 1946.[2] In 2005, it was chosen by Time magazine as one of the one hundred best English-language novels from 1923 to the present. In various letters, Waugh himself refers to the novel a number of times as his magnum opus; however, in 1950 he wrote to Graham Greene saying "I re-readBrideshead Revisited and was appalled." In Waugh's preface to the 1959 revised edition ofBrideshead the author explains the circumstances in which the novel was written, in the six
months between December 1943 and June 1944 following a minor parachute accident. He is mildly disparaging of the novel, saying; "It was a bleak period of present privation and threatening disaster — the period of soya beans and Basic English — and in consequence the book is infused with a kind of gluttony, for food and wine, for the splendours of the recent past, and for rhetorical and ornamental language which now, with a full stomach, I find distasteful."
want to watch The Sopranos >>months between December 1943 and June 1944 following a minor parachute accident. He is mildly disparaging of the novel, saying; "It was a bleak period of present privation and threatening disaster — the period of soya beans and Basic English — and in consequence the book is infused with a kind of gluttony, for food and wine, for the splendours of the recent past, and for rhetorical and ornamental language which now, with a full stomach, I find distasteful."