Brighton Rock

Brighton Rock by Graham Greene, published by Penguin Books in October 1989, is a significant work of fiction that explores themes of violence and gang warfare. This edition spans 764 pages and presents a chilling narrative centered on the tragic life of a seventeen-year-old boy named Pinkie, who aspires to lead a gang in Brighton, England. The story delves into Pinkie’s lack of compassion and his ruthless ambition, set against a backdrop of criminal activity and moral complexity.
Readers will encounter a profound examination of evil and sin through Pinkie’s character, who embodies calculated malevolence while grappling with his Catholic beliefs. The narrative also introduces Ida Arnold, a figure determined to confront Pinkie’s actions and seek justice for her friend Hale. Greene’s exploration of these characters invites contemplation of moral dilemmas, making this novel a notable study in psychological realism and the complexities of human nature.
Official synopsis Publisher
Originally published in 1938, Graham Greene’s chilling expose of violence and gang warfare is a masterpiece of psychological realism and often considered Graham Greene’s best novel. It is a fascinating study of evil, sin, and the ”appalling strangeness of the mercy of God,” a classic of its kind. Set in Brighton, England, among the criminal rabble, the book depicts the tragic career of a seventeen-year-old boy named Pinkie whose primary ambition is to lead a gang to rival that of the wealthy and established Colleoni. Pinkie is devoid of compassion or human feeling, despising weakness of the spirit or of the flesh. Responsible for the razor slashes that killed Kite and also for the death of Hale, he is the embodiment of calculated evil. As a Catholic, however, he is convinced that his retribution does not lie in human hands. He is therefore not prepared for Ida Arnold, Hale’s avenging angel. Ida, whose allegiance is with life, the here and now, has her own ideas about the circumstances surrounding Hale’s death. For the sheer joy of it she takes up the challenge of bringing the infernal Pinkie to an earthly kind of justice. When finished, the listener is sure to ponder some lofty moral issues to which Greene, a Catholic writer, withholds easy judgments.
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