Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning - A Novel - cover

Saturday Night and Sunday Morning - A Novel

Alan Sillitoe

Publisher: Open Road Media

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Alan Sillitoe’s bestselling debut novel about debauchery, infidelity . . . and the morning after Arthur Seaton, a ladies’ man and factory-worker extraordinaire, has just downed seven gins and eleven pints at his local pub. Thoroughly smashed, he proceeds to tumble down an entire flight of stairs, pass out, and wake up again only to vomit on a middle-aged couple. Luckily Arthur’s lover, Brenda—a married woman with two kids—lets Arthur escape to her bed. Such are Saturdays in this bachelor’s life. When Arthur is not romancing Brenda, evading her husband, or drinking himself silly, he is turning up his nose at authority, disparaging the army, and trying to avoid paying too much income tax. Moreover, Arthur’s rapscallion ways soon lead him into the bed of Brenda’s younger sister—who is also married.   But no matter how much fun there is to be had, every Saturday night has its Sunday morning, replete with hangovers and consequences: A local bigmouth starts gossiping about Arthur’s affairs, Brenda gets pregnant, the husbands find out what’s been going on, and Arthur suffers a terrible beating. Perhaps the time has come for this playboy to settle down and marry that third woman he has been seeing on the side . . .   One of the first books to sell over a million copies in the UK when it was released in paperback, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning has since become a key literary reference of postwar British culture and society, as well as a classic British New Wave film.   This ebook features an illustrated biography of Alan Sillitoe including rare images from the author’s estate.  
Available since: 04/19/2016.
Print length: 239 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Russian Short Story The - Volume 3 - Fyodor Dostoyevsky to Leo Tolstoy - cover

    Russian Short Story The - Volume...

    Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Nikolai...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Russian novel has a reputation that is immense, both in narrative and in length.  Unquestionably though the ideas, themes and characters make many novels rightly revered as world class, as icons of literature. 
     
    Perhaps an easier way to enjoy a wider selection of the Russian heritage, with its varied and glorious literary talents, is with the short story.  These gems sparkle and beguile the mind with their characters and narrative, exploring facets of society and the human condition that more Western authors somehow find more difficult to navigate, or to explore, explain and relate to.   
     
    The Russian short story is, in many respects, in a genre of its own.  It is at its captivating best whether it’s an exploration of real-life experiences, through fantasy and fables and on to total absurdity. 
     
    In a land so vast it is unsurprising that it is a world almost unto itself. Cultures and landscapes of differing hues are packed together bound only by the wilful bonds and force of Empire. 
     
    The stories in this collection traverse the decades where one might be a serf under an absolute monarch, and the reality of that was pretty near to slavery, into an emancipation of sorts in the fields, or towns under the despotic will of landowners and the rich into the upheavals of Empire and then the overthrow of the ruling class and its replacement by the communists, who promised equality for all and delivered a society where the down-trodden remained the lowest yet vital cog of the state machine and its will.  
     
    Whilst Tolstoy, Gogol, Dostoevsky, Pushkin and Chekhov are a given in any Russian collection we also explore and include Andreyev, Korolenko, Turgenev, Blavatsky and many others to create a world rich and dense across a sprawling landscape of diverse people, riddled with the class and unfairness in perhaps some of the most turbulent times that Russia has ever experienced. 
     
    01 - The Russian Short Story - Volume 3 - An Introduction 
    02 - An Honest Thief by Fyodor Dostoyevsky 
    03 - The Crocodile. An Extraordinary Incident - Part 1 by Fyodor Dostoyevsky 
    04 - The Crocodile. An Extraordinary Incident - Part 2 by Fyodor Dostoyevsky 
    05 - Bobok by Fyodor Dostoyevsky 
    06 - How a Muzhik Fed Two Officials by Nikolai Schedrin 
    07 - Diary of a Lunatic by Leo Tolstoy 
    08 - Aloysha the Pot by Leo Tolstoy 
    09 - How Much Land Does A Man Need by Leo Tolstoy 
    10 - The Snowstorm - Part 1 by Leo Tolstoy 
    11 - The Snowstorm - Part 2 by Leo Tolstoy 
    12 - God Sees The Truth But Waits by Leo Tolstoy
    Show book
  • The Red House Mystery - cover

    The Red House Mystery

    A. Milne

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Authors all too often become the victims of their own success, forever associated with only a handful of their works which are a relatively small part of an otherwise prolific output. For an author of successful plays and novels as A.A. Milne was, to be then only known as a children's writer was an annoyance to say the least. Yet it comes as no surprise that in Milne's 1922 book "The Red House Mystery" we find much of the warmth and wit that was a few years later to characterize his children's writing in The" Winnie The Pooh" books; albeit in the very different setting of a murder mystery! 
    Here is a classic "locked room" conundrum with a delicious twist in the tale. 
    Narrated by Simon Hester. With original music.
    Show book
  • The Early Stories of Philip K Dick - cover

    The Early Stories of Philip K Dick

    Philip K. Dick

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Every legend has a beginning. Dreamscape Media presents a collection of thirteen early short stories penned by Philip K. Dick. Exploring themes of authoritarianism, alternate universes, and altered consciousness, the stories (including The Variable Man, Second Variety, and The Defenders) first appeared in American science fiction magazines of the 1950s and earned him the respect of such peers as Robert Heinlein and Ursula LeGuin, as well as the adulation of a voracious readership.
    Show book
  • Twelve Stories and a Dream (Unabridged) - cover

    Twelve Stories and a Dream...

    H. G. Wells

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Twelve Stories and a Dream -- "A Dream of Armageddon": "That book," he repeated, pointing a lean finger, "is about dreams. Dreams tell you nothing." I did not catch his meaning for a second. "They don't know," he added. I looked a little more attentively at his face. "There are dreams," he said, "and dreams." Also includes "Filmer," "The Magic Shop," "The Valley of Spiders," "The Truth about Pyecraft," "Mr. Skelmersdale in Fairyland," "The Story of the Inexperienced Ghost," "Jimmy Goggles the God," "The New Accelerator," "Mr. Ledbetter's Vacation," "The Stolen Body," "Mr. Brisher's Treasure," and "Miss Winchelsea's Heart."
    Show book
  • The Child's Story - cover

    The Child's Story

    Charles Dickens

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Originally published in the 1852 Christmas edition of Dickens' journal Household Words, The Child's Story is the account of a man's life from childhood to the present as told to his grandson in the form of a fairytale about a traveler and the people he meets. This version of The Child's Story is part of Dreamscape's The Christmas Stories of Charles Dickens.
    Show book
  • First Love - cover

    First Love

    Ivan Turgenev

    • 0
    • 10
    • 0
    A timeless tale of youth, love, and loss, masterfully rendered by Ivan Turgenev Vladimir Petrovich and his friends are gathered at a party recounting stories of their first loves. Vladimir tells a vivid tale of unrequited adolescent passion: When he was sixteen, he met the beautiful twenty-one-year-old Zinaida Alexandrovna Zasyekina and fell head over heels. Unfortunately for Vladimir, several other—more eligible—suitors also hoped to win the affections of the beautiful Zinaida.   An assured classic, Turgenev’s poignant novella follows young Vladimir through the peaks of ecstatic ardor and the valleys of bitter disappointment, concluding in inevitable tragedy.   This ebook has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices.
    Show book