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  1. Scott-King's Modern Europe, published in 1947, is a novella by Evelyn Waugh, sometimes called A Sojourn in Neutralia. It was first published in an abridged form in the Cornhill Magazine in 1947, and then by Chapman & Hall, also in 1947. The first American edition, by Little, Brown, appeared in 1949.

    • Evelyn Waugh
    • 1947
  2. 2 de mar. de 2019 · Scott-King's modern Europe. -- : Waugh, Evelyn, 1903-1966 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. Scott-King's modern Europe. -- by. Waugh, Evelyn, 1903-1966. Publication date. 1947. Publisher. [London] : Chapman and Hall. Collection. trent_university; internetarchivebooks; inlibrary; printdisabled. Contributor. Internet Archive.

  3. Scott-King's Modern Europe. Evelyn Waugh. 3.42. 97 ratings15 reviews. This is "the story of a summer holiday, a light tale." Scott-King is a middle-aged English schoolmaster, "an adult, an intellectual, a classical scholar, almost a poet" - slightly bald and slightly corpulent.

    • (97)
    • Hardcover
    • Evelyn Waugh
  4. This is the story of Mr. Scott-King, a schoolmaster who has an affinity for Bellorius, who dimly lived in that part of the Habsburg Empire which is now the totalitarian state of Neutralia.

  5. Scott-King is a schoolmaster’s schoolmaster: quiet, measured, honest, and thoughtful. He is convinced to disrupt his quiet, consistent life in England to visit the totalitarian country of...

  6. February 20, 1948 Mr. Waugh Pays a Visit to Perilous Neutralia By GEORGE ORWELL Scott-King's Modern Europe By Evelyn Waugh . r. Evelyn Waugh’s recent book, “The Loved One,” was an attack, and by no means a good- natured attack, on American civilization, but in “Scott-King’s Modern Europe” he shows himself willing to handle his native Continent with at least equal rudeness.

  7. 11 de abr. de 2012 · SCOTT KING'S MODERN EUROPE. by Evelyn Waugh ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 15, 1949. bookshelf. shop now. Returning more nearly to the mood of his earlier works, this short novel, of a traditional English schoolmaster's exposure to the materialism and totalitarianism of a middle-European country, is a skillful satiric exercise and one which ...