The Quarries of Sicily
by
Book Details
About the Book
This short novel provides a parallel to the abortive Athenian invasion of Syracuse in Sicily and the American intervention in Vietnam. It has current applications to the posture of the United States in the post-Cold War world Few recent novelists have managed to manipulate successfully as complex a story ... or to suggest so convincingly changes within a wide range of persons. This terse work can be read in a short time, but it gives one things to think about for long time -- like the assertion that 'a democracy must walk carefully and not abandon itself to genius.' Kansas City Star. The Quarries of Sicily is "a novel of ideas -- literate, educated in the classical sense, honestly stated, and for the most part thoroughly pursued..... An eminently satisfying novel." Publisher's Weekly.
Doulis "writes with passion and maturity, and his characters are finely done, humanly flawed, and understandable." Library Journal.
The Quarries of Sicily "is "an excellent novel that tells an interesting story of interesting people, (and) that comments on several aspects of contemporary life, including man's inability to face the unknown world." Best Sellers.
About the Author
Thomas Doulis, a critic, translator, and literary historian, has published two novels: Path for Our Valor, (1963) a novel about the paratroops, and The Quarries of Sicily, (1969), set in Greece during the years of the military Junta. He has worked on The Open Hearth, and a sequel, for seventeen years.