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The Man Who Was Thursday

The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare is a 1908 novel by G. K. Chesterton. The book has been described as a metaphysical thriller.

The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare
First edition
AuthorG. K. Chesterton
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Genrethriller, philosophical novel, adventure, fantasy
Set inLondon and France, 1900s
PublisherJ. W. Arrowsmith
Publication date
1908
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pagesviii, 330 pp
823.912
LC ClassPZ3.C4265Mn9
TextThe Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare at Wikisource

Plot summary edit

Chesterton prefixed the novel with a poem written to Edmund Clerihew Bentley, revisiting the pair's early history and the challenges presented to their early faith by the times.

In Victorian-era London, Gabriel Syme is recruited at Scotland Yard to a secret anti-anarchist police corps. Lucian Gregory, an anarchistic poet, lives in the suburb of Saffron Park. Syme meets him at a party and they debate the meaning of poetry. Gregory argues that revolt is the basis of poetry. Syme demurs, insisting the essence of poetry is not revolution but law. He antagonises Gregory by asserting that the most poetical of human creations is the timetable for the London Underground. He suggests Gregory is not really serious about anarchism, which so irritates Gregory that he takes Syme to an underground anarchist meeting place, under oath not to disclose its existence to anyone, revealing his public endorsement of anarchy is a ruse to make him seem harmless, when in fact he is an influential member of the local chapter of the European anarchist council.

The central council consists of seven men, each using the name of a day of the week as a cover; the position of Thursday is about to be elected by Gregory's local chapter. Gregory expects to win the election but just before, Syme reveals to Gregory after an oath of secrecy that he is a secret policeman. In order to make Syme think that the anarchists are harmless after all, Gregory speaks very unconvincingly to the local chapter, so that they feel that he is not zealous enough for the job. Syme makes a rousing anarchist speech in which he denounces everything that Gregory has said and wins the vote. He is sent immediately as the chapter's delegate to the central council.

In his efforts to thwart the council, Syme eventually discovers that five of the other six members are also undercover detectives; each was employed just as mysteriously and assigned to defeat the Council. They soon find out they were fighting each other and not real anarchists; such was the mastermind plan of their president, Sunday. In a surreal conclusion, Sunday is unmasked as only seeming to be an anarchist; in fact, he is a proponent of state power like the detectives. Sunday is unable to give an answer to the question of why he caused so much trouble and pain for the detectives. Gregory, the only real anarchist, seems to challenge the false council. His accusation is that they, as rulers, have never suffered like Gregory and their other subjects and so their power is illegitimate. Syme refutes the accusation immediately, because of the terrors inflicted by Sunday on the rest of the council.

The dream ends when Sunday is asked if he has ever suffered. His last words, "can ye drink of the cup that I drink of?", is the question Jesus asks St. James and St. John in the Gospel of Mark, chapter 10, vs 38–39, a rhetorical question intended to demonstrate that the disciples are wrong to covet his glory because they are unable to bear the suffering for the sins of the world for which he is destined.

Annotations and details edit

 
"The suburb of Saffron Park lay on the sunset side of London, as red and ragged as a cloud of sunset. It was built of a bright brick throughout", a parody of Bedford Park[1]

Martin Gardner edited The Annotated Thursday, which provides a great deal of biographical and contextual information in the form of footnotes, along with the text of the book, original reviews from the time of the book's first publication and comments made by Chesterton on the book.[2]

The literary critic Ian Fletcher notes that Chesterton's "Saffron Park", with which the novel begins, is a parody of the garden suburb of Bedford Park in Chiswick, with its red brick buildings, "the outburst of a speculative builder" (Jonathan Carr), "faintly tinged with art" (the suburb was considered aesthetic, and was home to many artists), and its Queen Anne architecture. Fletcher comments that Chesterton met his future wife in the suburb, and that the description was somewhat inaccurate, as Chesterton liked to dramatise.[1]

The costumes the detectives don towards the end of the book represent what was created on their respective day. Sunday, "the sabbath" and "the peace of God," sits upon a throne in front of them. The name of the girl Syme likes, Rosamond, is derived from "Rosa Mundi," meaning "Rose of the World" in Latin.

Influence and critical assessments edit

Many have noted the influence of The Man Who Was Thursday on surrealism and spy thrillers. Chesterton's book allegedly inspired the Irish Republican Michael Collins with the idea "if you didn't seem to be hiding nobody hunted you out".[3]

The novelist Kingsley Amis describes his reading of the novel as "thrilling", comparing Chesterton to "first-rate action-writer[s] like Ian Fleming or Dick Francis" for suspense, but also "persuading you that something wonderful is afoot, that the events described have a mysterious and momentous significance you hardly dare guess at".[4] Amis calls it "the most thrilling book I have ever read", admiring the twists and turns of the plot:

What we expect from fantasy or a nightmare is that it should develop in an illogical, unpredictable way or perhaps not actually develop at all. But the feeling of the reader of The Man Who Was Thursday...is of being pulled inexorably along an inevitable path. Even the bizarre scenes turn out to have a definite and intelligible purpose. ... In one way or another, then, the nightmare is a controlled nightmare, and so in its way believable. But the sense of mystery remains, heightened indeed by glimpses of the ordinary world, the backcloth against which the drama or melodrama or whatever we decide to call it takes place. Definition remains impossible: The Man Who Was Thursday is not quite a political bad dream, nor a metaphysical thriller, nor a cosmic joke in the form of a spy novel, but it has something of all three. What it has most of is a boy's adventure story...[4]

In his final essay, Christopher Hitchens wrote: "As to the durability or importance of GKC as a fictionist: the late Sir Kingsley Amis once told me that he reread The Man Who Was Thursday every year, and on one of his annual visitations wrote a tribute. That novel, with its evocation of eeriness and solitude, and its fascination with anonymity, has been credited by some with a share of influence on Franz Kafka."[5]

Critic Adam Gopnik concurs: "The Man Who Was Thursday is one of the hidden hinges of twentieth-century writing, the place where, before our eyes, the nonsense-fantastical tradition of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear pivots and becomes the nightmare-fantastical tradition of Kafka and Borges. It is also, along with Chesterton's The Napoleon of Notting Hill, the nearest thing that this masterly writer wrote to a masterpiece."[6]

Debate on the novel's pessimism edit

Like most of Chesterton's fiction, the story is full of Christian allegory. Chesterton, a Protestant at this time (he joined the Roman Catholic Church about 15 years later), suffered from a brief bout of depression during his college days. He insisted: "The book ... was not intended to describe the real world as it was, or as I thought it was, even when my thoughts were considerably less settled than they are now. It was intended to describe the world of wild doubt and despair which the pessimists were generally describing at that date; with just a gleam of hope in some double meaning of the doubt, which even the pessimists felt in some fitful fashion".[7]

Chesterton later said that he had written this book to affirm that goodness and right were at the heart of every aspect of the world. However, the philosopher John Gray argues the story is more pessimistic than Christian:

Though some have tried to interpret The Man Who Was Thursday as a type of Christian allegory, the world it describes has more in common with the interminable labyrinth of Kafka's Castle. In the orderly Christian cosmos, in which Chesterton wanted to believe, nothing is finally tragic, still less absurd. The world is a divine comedy, the ultimate significance of which is never in doubt. In The Man Who Was Thursday, the world is illegible and may well be nonsensical. This was the nightmare he struggled, for the most part successfully, to forget. Producing a succession of wearisome polemics and mechanical paradoxes, he spent his life denying the vision that informed his greatest work.[8]

Adaptations edit

Mercury Theatre adaptation edit

On 5 September 1938 The Mercury Theatre on the Air presented an abridged radio-play adaptation, written by Orson Welles, who was a great admirer of Chesterton. He omitted most of Chapter 14: The Six Philosophers, which contains most of the metaphysical speculation. This was almost two months before the infamous War of the Worlds broadcast.[9]

APJAC Productions musical adaptation edit

It was reported in January 1967 that Jerome Hellman and Arthur P. Jacobs' APJAC Productions were preparing movie projects including a musical adaptation of Chesterton's novel by Leslie Bricusse.[10] The film was not made.

BBC radio adaptations edit

There have been at least three adaptations broadcast by BBC radio over the years.

On Sunday 13 July 1947, the BBC broadcast a live theatrical adaptation by Cecil Chesterton and Ralph Neale, which was produced by Jan Bussell and starred Harold Scott as Thursday, Peter Bull as Sunday, Stringer Davis as Comrade Witherspoon, Arnold Diamond as Colonel du Croix, Richard Goolden as Friday, and Campbell Singer as Wednesday.[11]

In 1986 the BBC broadcast a four-part series dramatised by Peter Buckman and directed by Glyn Dearman. It featured Michael Hadley as Thursday/Gabriel Syme, Natasha Pyne as Rosamond and Edward de Souza as Wednesday/The Marquis de St. Eustache.[12]

In 2005 the BBC broadcast the novel as read by Geoffrey Palmer, as thirteen half-hour parts. It has been re-broadcast several times since then, including in 2008 (one hundred years after first publication) 2016 and 2020.[13]

2016 film edit

Hungarian filmmaker Balázs Juszt [hu] wrote and directed a film inspired by the novel, starring François Arnaud, Ana Ularu, and Jordi Mollà, which premiered on 21 June 2016 at the Edinburgh Film Festival.[14] Juszt's inspiration was his mentor, István Szabó.

Popular culture edit

The 2000 video game Deus Ex features several excerpts from the book and lists Gabriel Syme as a current resident of the "Ton Hotel".[15]

In Kim Newman's Anno Dracula: 1895, the Council of Days, led by Sunday, exists and is plotting to overthrow Dracula during the tenth anniversary of his rule over Britain. The Council includes Gabriel Syme, Peter the Painter (Friday), and Newman's recurring character Kate Reed.[16]

In Neil Gaiman's The Sandman, The Man Who Was October—an unwritten sequel to The Man Who Was Thursday—appears in the Library of Dreams. Season of Mists ends with a quote from the fictional novel. In The Doll's House, the character Gilbert physically resembles G. K. Chesterton.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Fletcher, Ian (2016). "4. Bedford Park: Aesthete's Elysium?". In Ian Fletcher (ed.). Romantic Mythologies. Routledge. pp. 169–207. ISBN 978-1-317-27960-0.
  2. ^ Martin Gardner (ed.), The Annotated Thursday - G.K.Chesterton's Masterpiece "The Man Who Was Thursday", Ignatius Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0-89870-744-1
  3. ^ Margery Forester, Michael Collins – The Lost Leader, p.35., Gill & MacMillan, 2006, ISBN 978-0717140145
  4. ^ a b Amis, Kingsley (1 January 1990). The Amis Collection, Selected Non-Fiction 1954-1990 (First ed.). New York: Penguin Books. pp. 43–46. ISBN 0091739705.
  5. ^ Hitchens, Christopher (March 2012). "The Reactionary: The charming, sinister G. K. Chesterton". The Atlantic. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  6. ^ Gopnik, Adam (30 June 2008). "The Back of the World". The New Yorker. No. July 7, 2008 Issue. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  7. ^ . Cse.dmu.ac.uk. Archived from the original (TXT) on 12 July 2002. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  8. ^ Gray, John (9 December 2010). . The New Statesman. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  9. ^ The Mercury Theatre on the Air: First Person Singular — "The Man Who Was Thursday" at the Paley Center for Media; retrieved 16 June 2012
  10. ^ , BoxOffice (PDF), p. 17, 16 January 1967, archived from the original on 16 August 2016, retrieved 28 May 2017
  11. ^ "The Man Who Was Thursday". BBC. 13 July 1947. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  12. ^ "The Man Who Was Thursday". BBC. 13 June 1986. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  13. ^ "The Man Who Was Thursday by GK Chesterton: Episodes". BBC. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  14. ^ , Edfilmfest.org.uk, archived from the original on 5 October 2016, retrieved 28 May 2017
  15. ^ "Book Review: The Man Who Was Thursday – By G.K. Chesterton". PresbyFormed. 26 September 2016. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  16. ^ "'Anno Dracula 1895' Brings Action To A Complicated World". Comics Alliance. 16 March 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2021.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • The Man Who Was Thursday, a nightmare at Project Gutenberg
  • The Man Who Was Thursday at Standard Ebooks
  • The Man Who Was Thursday: a nightmare, 1908 First Edition at Open Library
  • A radio play based on the book by the Mercury Theatre on Air
  • Sonja West's C.S. Lewis Institute lecture on Thursday
  • Mercury Theatre dramatisation of The Man Who Was Thursday (MP3, 26.3 MB, 1 hour)
  •   The Man Who Was Thursday public domain audiobook at LibriVox

thursday, nightmare, 1908, novel, chesterton, book, been, described, metaphysical, thriller, nightmarefirst, editionauthorg, chestertoncountryunited, kingdomlanguageenglishgenrethriller, philosophical, novel, adventure, fantasyset, inlondon, france, 1900spubli. The Man Who Was Thursday A Nightmare is a 1908 novel by G K Chesterton The book has been described as a metaphysical thriller The Man Who Was Thursday A NightmareFirst editionAuthorG K ChestertonCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishGenrethriller philosophical novel adventure fantasySet inLondon and France 1900sPublisherJ W ArrowsmithPublication date1908Media typePrint hardcover Pagesviii 330 ppDewey Decimal823 912LC ClassPZ3 C4265Mn9TextThe Man Who Was Thursday A Nightmare at Wikisource Contents 1 Plot summary 2 Annotations and details 3 Influence and critical assessments 4 Debate on the novel s pessimism 5 Adaptations 5 1 Mercury Theatre adaptation 5 2 APJAC Productions musical adaptation 5 3 BBC radio adaptations 5 4 2016 film 6 Popular culture 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPlot summary editChesterton prefixed the novel with a poem written to Edmund Clerihew Bentley revisiting the pair s early history and the challenges presented to their early faith by the times In Victorian era London Gabriel Syme is recruited at Scotland Yard to a secret anti anarchist police corps Lucian Gregory an anarchistic poet lives in the suburb of Saffron Park Syme meets him at a party and they debate the meaning of poetry Gregory argues that revolt is the basis of poetry Syme demurs insisting the essence of poetry is not revolution but law He antagonises Gregory by asserting that the most poetical of human creations is the timetable for the London Underground He suggests Gregory is not really serious about anarchism which so irritates Gregory that he takes Syme to an underground anarchist meeting place under oath not to disclose its existence to anyone revealing his public endorsement of anarchy is a ruse to make him seem harmless when in fact he is an influential member of the local chapter of the European anarchist council The central council consists of seven men each using the name of a day of the week as a cover the position of Thursday is about to be elected by Gregory s local chapter Gregory expects to win the election but just before Syme reveals to Gregory after an oath of secrecy that he is a secret policeman In order to make Syme think that the anarchists are harmless after all Gregory speaks very unconvincingly to the local chapter so that they feel that he is not zealous enough for the job Syme makes a rousing anarchist speech in which he denounces everything that Gregory has said and wins the vote He is sent immediately as the chapter s delegate to the central council In his efforts to thwart the council Syme eventually discovers that five of the other six members are also undercover detectives each was employed just as mysteriously and assigned to defeat the Council They soon find out they were fighting each other and not real anarchists such was the mastermind plan of their president Sunday In a surreal conclusion Sunday is unmasked as only seeming to be an anarchist in fact he is a proponent of state power like the detectives Sunday is unable to give an answer to the question of why he caused so much trouble and pain for the detectives Gregory the only real anarchist seems to challenge the false council His accusation is that they as rulers have never suffered like Gregory and their other subjects and so their power is illegitimate Syme refutes the accusation immediately because of the terrors inflicted by Sunday on the rest of the council The dream ends when Sunday is asked if he has ever suffered His last words can ye drink of the cup that I drink of is the question Jesus asks St James and St John in the Gospel of Mark chapter 10 vs 38 39 a rhetorical question intended to demonstrate that the disciples are wrong to covet his glory because they are unable to bear the suffering for the sins of the world for which he is destined Annotations and details edit nbsp The suburb of Saffron Park lay on the sunset side of London as red and ragged as a cloud of sunset It was built of a bright brick throughout a parody of Bedford Park 1 Martin Gardner edited The Annotated Thursday which provides a great deal of biographical and contextual information in the form of footnotes along with the text of the book original reviews from the time of the book s first publication and comments made by Chesterton on the book 2 The literary critic Ian Fletcher notes that Chesterton s Saffron Park with which the novel begins is a parody of the garden suburb of Bedford Park in Chiswick with its red brick buildings the outburst of a speculative builder Jonathan Carr faintly tinged with art the suburb was considered aesthetic and was home to many artists and its Queen Anne architecture Fletcher comments that Chesterton met his future wife in the suburb and that the description was somewhat inaccurate as Chesterton liked to dramatise 1 The costumes the detectives don towards the end of the book represent what was created on their respective day Sunday the sabbath and the peace of God sits upon a throne in front of them The name of the girl Syme likes Rosamond is derived from Rosa Mundi meaning Rose of the World in Latin Influence and critical assessments editMany have noted the influence of The Man Who Was Thursday on surrealism and spy thrillers Chesterton s book allegedly inspired the Irish Republican Michael Collins with the idea if you didn t seem to be hiding nobody hunted you out 3 The novelist Kingsley Amis describes his reading of the novel as thrilling comparing Chesterton to first rate action writer s like Ian Fleming or Dick Francis for suspense but also persuading you that something wonderful is afoot that the events described have a mysterious and momentous significance you hardly dare guess at 4 Amis calls it the most thrilling book I have ever read admiring the twists and turns of the plot What we expect from fantasy or a nightmare is that it should develop in an illogical unpredictable way or perhaps not actually develop at all But the feeling of the reader of The Man Who Was Thursday is of being pulled inexorably along an inevitable path Even the bizarre scenes turn out to have a definite and intelligible purpose In one way or another then the nightmare is a controlled nightmare and so in its way believable But the sense of mystery remains heightened indeed by glimpses of the ordinary world the backcloth against which the drama or melodrama or whatever we decide to call it takes place Definition remains impossible The Man Who Was Thursday is not quite a political bad dream nor a metaphysical thriller nor a cosmic joke in the form of a spy novel but it has something of all three What it has most of is a boy s adventure story 4 In his final essay Christopher Hitchens wrote As to the durability or importance of GKC as a fictionist the late Sir Kingsley Amis once told me that he reread The Man Who Was Thursday every year and on one of his annual visitations wrote a tribute That novel with its evocation of eeriness and solitude and its fascination with anonymity has been credited by some with a share of influence on Franz Kafka 5 Critic Adam Gopnik concurs The Man Who Was Thursday is one of the hidden hinges of twentieth century writing the place where before our eyes the nonsense fantastical tradition of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear pivots and becomes the nightmare fantastical tradition of Kafka and Borges It is also along with Chesterton s The Napoleon of Notting Hill the nearest thing that this masterly writer wrote to a masterpiece 6 Debate on the novel s pessimism editLike most of Chesterton s fiction the story is full of Christian allegory Chesterton a Protestant at this time he joined the Roman Catholic Church about 15 years later suffered from a brief bout of depression during his college days He insisted The book was not intended to describe the real world as it was or as I thought it was even when my thoughts were considerably less settled than they are now It was intended to describe the world of wild doubt and despair which the pessimists were generally describing at that date with just a gleam of hope in some double meaning of the doubt which even the pessimists felt in some fitful fashion 7 Chesterton later said that he had written this book to affirm that goodness and right were at the heart of every aspect of the world However the philosopher John Gray argues the story is more pessimistic than Christian Though some have tried to interpret The Man Who Was Thursday as a type of Christian allegory the world it describes has more in common with the interminable labyrinth of Kafka s Castle In the orderly Christian cosmos in which Chesterton wanted to believe nothing is finally tragic still less absurd The world is a divine comedy the ultimate significance of which is never in doubt In The Man Who Was Thursday the world is illegible and may well be nonsensical This was the nightmare he struggled for the most part successfully to forget Producing a succession of wearisome polemics and mechanical paradoxes he spent his life denying the vision that informed his greatest work 8 Adaptations editMercury Theatre adaptation edit On 5 September 1938 The Mercury Theatre on the Air presented an abridged radio play adaptation written by Orson Welles who was a great admirer of Chesterton He omitted most of Chapter 14 The Six Philosophers which contains most of the metaphysical speculation This was almost two months before the infamous War of the Worlds broadcast 9 APJAC Productions musical adaptation edit It was reported in January 1967 that Jerome Hellman and Arthur P Jacobs APJAC Productions were preparing movie projects including a musical adaptation of Chesterton s novel by Leslie Bricusse 10 The film was not made BBC radio adaptations edit There have been at least three adaptations broadcast by BBC radio over the years On Sunday 13 July 1947 the BBC broadcast a live theatrical adaptation by Cecil Chesterton and Ralph Neale which was produced by Jan Bussell and starred Harold Scott as Thursday Peter Bull as Sunday Stringer Davis as Comrade Witherspoon Arnold Diamond as Colonel du Croix Richard Goolden as Friday and Campbell Singer as Wednesday 11 In 1986 the BBC broadcast a four part series dramatised by Peter Buckman and directed by Glyn Dearman It featured Michael Hadley as Thursday Gabriel Syme Natasha Pyne as Rosamond and Edward de Souza as Wednesday The Marquis de St Eustache 12 In 2005 the BBC broadcast the novel as read by Geoffrey Palmer as thirteen half hour parts It has been re broadcast several times since then including in 2008 one hundred years after first publication 2016 and 2020 13 2016 film edit Hungarian filmmaker Balazs Juszt hu wrote and directed a film inspired by the novel starring Francois Arnaud Ana Ularu and Jordi Molla which premiered on 21 June 2016 at the Edinburgh Film Festival 14 Juszt s inspiration was his mentor Istvan Szabo Popular culture editThe 2000 video game Deus Ex features several excerpts from the book and lists Gabriel Syme as a current resident of the Ton Hotel 15 In Kim Newman s Anno Dracula 1895 the Council of Days led by Sunday exists and is plotting to overthrow Dracula during the tenth anniversary of his rule over Britain The Council includes Gabriel Syme Peter the Painter Friday and Newman s recurring character Kate Reed 16 In Neil Gaiman s The Sandman The Man Who Was October an unwritten sequel to The Man Who Was Thursday appears in the Library of Dreams Season of Mists ends with a quote from the fictional novel In The Doll s House the character Gilbert physically resembles G K Chesterton References edit a b Fletcher Ian 2016 4 Bedford Park Aesthete s Elysium In Ian Fletcher ed Romantic Mythologies Routledge pp 169 207 ISBN 978 1 317 27960 0 Martin Gardner ed The Annotated Thursday G K Chesterton s Masterpiece The Man Who Was Thursday Ignatius Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 89870 744 1 Margery Forester Michael Collins The Lost Leader p 35 Gill amp MacMillan 2006 ISBN 978 0717140145 a b Amis Kingsley 1 January 1990 The Amis Collection Selected Non Fiction 1954 1990 First ed New York Penguin Books pp 43 46 ISBN 0091739705 Hitchens Christopher March 2012 The Reactionary The charming sinister G K Chesterton The Atlantic Retrieved 14 June 2020 Gopnik Adam 30 June 2008 The Back of the World The New Yorker No July 7 2008 Issue Retrieved 14 June 2020 Here is the text from the PENGUIN EDITION of The Man Who Was Thursday 1972 PP 185 186 Cse dmu ac uk Archived from the original TXT on 12 July 2002 Retrieved 24 October 2016 Gray John 9 December 2010 The Wit and Wisdom of G K Chesterton G K Chesterton s metaphysical nightmare The New Statesman Retrieved 20 September 2023 The Mercury Theatre on the Air First Person Singular The Man Who Was Thursday at the Paley Center for Media retrieved 16 June 2012 Jacobs Hellman Merge Under APJAC Banner BoxOffice PDF p 17 16 January 1967 archived from the original on 16 August 2016 retrieved 28 May 2017 The Man Who Was Thursday BBC 13 July 1947 Retrieved 21 June 2022 The Man Who Was Thursday BBC 13 June 1986 Retrieved 9 August 2021 The Man Who Was Thursday by GK Chesterton Episodes BBC Retrieved 9 August 2021 The Man Who Was Thursday 2016 Film Archive Edinburgh International Film Festival 2016 Edfilmfest org uk archived from the original on 5 October 2016 retrieved 28 May 2017 Book Review The Man Who Was Thursday By G K Chesterton PresbyFormed 26 September 2016 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Anno Dracula 1895 Brings Action To A Complicated World Comics Alliance 16 March 2017 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Further reading editCawthorn James Michael Moorcock 1988 Fantasy The 100 Best Books New York Carroll amp Graf pp 51 52 ISBN 0 312 15897 1 Clute John John Grant 1997 The Encyclopedia of Fantasy New York St Martin s Press p 181 ISBN 0 88184 708 9 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article The Man Who Was Thursday nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Man Who Was Thursday The Man Who Was Thursday a nightmare at Project Gutenberg The Man Who Was Thursday at Standard Ebooks The Man Who Was Thursday a nightmare 1908 First Edition at Open Library A radio play based on the book by the Mercury Theatre on Air Sonja West s C S Lewis Institute lecture on Thursday Mercury Theatre dramatisation of The Man Who Was Thursday MP3 26 3 MB 1 hour nbsp The Man Who Was Thursday public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Man Who Was Thursday amp oldid 1183157638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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