A Separate Peace

About A Separate Peace

An American classic and great bestseller for over thirty years, A Separate Peace is timeless in its description of adolescence during a period when the entire country was losing its innocence to the second world war.

Set at a boys boarding school in New England during the early years of World War II, A Separate Peace is a harrowing and luminous parable of the dark side of adolescence. Gene is a lonely, introverted intellectual. Phineas is a handsome, taunting, daredevil athlete. What happens between the two friends one summer, like the war itself, banishes the innocence of these boys and their world.

A bestseller for more than thirty years, A Separate Peace is John Knowles crowning achievement and an undisputed American classic.

Detail

Complete Title: A Separate Peace

Format: Paperback

Language: English

Number of Pages: 208

Publication Time: September 30, 2003

Publisher: Scribner

ISBN:

ISBN13:

About John Knowles

John Knowles John Knowles

John Knowles (September 16, 1926 – November 29, 2001), b. Fairmont, West Virginia, was an American novelist, best known for his novel A Separate Peace.

A 1945 graduate of the Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, Knowles graduated from Yale University as a member of the class of 1949W. A Separate Peace is based upon Knowles’ experiences at Exeter during the summer of 1943. The setting for The Devon School is a thinly veiled fictionalization of Phillips Exeter. The plot should not be taken as autobiographical, although many elements of the novel stem from personal experience. In his essay, “A Special Time, A Special Place,” Knowles wrote:

The only elements in A Separate Peace which were not in that summer were anger, violence, and hatred. There was only friendship, athleticism, and loyalty.

The secondary character Finny (Phineas) was the best friend of the main character, Gene. Knowles took to his grave the secret of whether Finny was all a part of his imagination, or an actual friend whose true identity was never spoken.

Gore Vidal, in his memoir Palimpsest, acknowledges that he and Knowles concurrently attended Phillips Exeter, with Vidal two years ahead. Vidal states that Knowles told him that the character Brinker, who precipitates the novel’s crisis, is based on Vidal. “We have been friends for many years now,” Vidal said, “and I admire the novel that he based on our school days, A Separate Peace.”

Knowles’ other significant works are Morning in Antibes, Double Vision: American Thoughts Abroad, Indian Summer, The Paragon, and Peace Breaks Out. None of these later works were as well received as A Separate Peace.

A resident of Southampton, New York, Knowles wrote seven novels, a book on travel and a collection of stories. He was the winner of the William Faulkner Award and the Rosenthal Award of the National Institute of Arts and Letters. In his later years, Knowles lectured to university audiences.

Reviews A Separate Peace

User ImageThe Library Lady

I remember this book distinctly because seldom have I hated a book more.In addition to being a depressing piece of work, it is about as relevant to kids today as a 45RPM single (that’s something we ha…

User ImageJeffrey Keeten

“And the rays of the sun were shooting past them, millions of rays shooting past them like–like golden machine-gun fire.”Gene is a boy from the South attending an exclusive New Hampshire prep school…

User ImageJim Fonseca

[Edited for typos and pictures added 12/11/21]A short review because I can’t add much to the thousands of reviews that are out there. The story takes place at an elite all-boys New England prep scho…

User Imagemark monday

uptight boy loves free spirit boy but is too uptight to admit it. fat-ass boy tries to get in the way. then, betrayal…

User ImageEm Lost In Books

Gene attended an exclusive New Hampshire school. 15 years later he came back to Devon School to seek forgiveness for what he did here while he was a student. In his school days he became friends with…

SR

I remember viscerally hating this – I found it incredibly boring and I don’t think anything really happened except a whole bunch of wank about being a moron and running and a paragraph lovingly descri…

User ImageAmanda

I recently re-read this book for the AP class that I’m teaching and I was reminded of what a deceptively simple book this appears to be on the surface. Set in Devon (an all boys prep school) during WW…

User ImageMatthew

This is one of those “required summer reading novels”. In fact, while I am sure they are out there, I don’t think I have ever met anyone who read this and it was not required for school.But, it was an…

User ImageAnnet

This is an American classic I didn’t know yet, but got to know via Goodreads. Turns out many of my Goodreads friends read it already, so I discovered this is a well known book. Beautiful read. Broodin…

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