From the book jacket:
Doris Lessing's new novel, the third volume of the series of
five 'Martha Quest' novels to be known collectively as Children of Violence,
describes how a Communist group blew into existence in a small town in
Central Africa, as a result of the general mood of optimism, enthusiasm
and admiration for the Soviet Union current in the years 1942, 1943 and
1944. Martha Quest, now divorced from her husband, becomes involved with
this group and marries the leader of it, a German refugee.
A Ripple from The Storm is an attempt to describe the psychology
of the group organised against society, the psychology of the individual
in an individualistic society trying to behave as 'communal man.' By the
end of the book it is apparent that the group has failed.
When Martha Quest appeared C. P. Snow wrote of Doris Lessing
in the Sunday Times: 'She is one of the most powerfully equipped
young novelists now writing," and of A Proper Marriage (the second
Children of Violnce novel) John Davenport wrote in The Observer:
'Miss Lessing is extremely gifted. Her book combines sympathy and objectivity
to a remarkable degree.' A Ripple from the Storm is of the same
high standards, both in artistic achievement and in its humanity.
This is book 3 of the series: Children
of Violence
Also see:
| O T H E R . E D I T I O N S |
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MacGibbon & Kee
British first edition, reissue
Published 1965 |
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Panther
British paperback reprint
Published 1966 |
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Panther (Granada)
British paperback reprint
Published 1966
Reprinted 1974
ISBN: 0-586-02117-5 |
|
Hart-Davis, MacGibbon
British hardcover reissue
Published 1977
ISBN: 0-246-109105-x |
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Paladin/Grafton
British paperback reprint
Published July 1989 |
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[Current Edition]
Flamingo (HarperCollins)
British softcover reprint
Published 1993
ISBN: 0-586-09000-2 |
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