Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Masters (novel)

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Country
  
United Kingdom

Series
  
Strangers and Brothers

Pages
  
320pp

Author
  
C. P. Snow

Publisher
  
Macmillan Publishers

3.9/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1951

Originally published
  
1951

Genre
  
Academy

The Masters (novel) t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSRCIy1MrfPzrmwc

Media type
  
Hardcover and Paperback

Preceded by
  
The Light and the Dark, The Conscience of the Rich, Time of Hope

Followed by
  
The Masters, Homecomings, The New Men

Similar
  
C P Snow books, Strangers and Brothers books

The Masters is the fifth novel in C. P. Snow's series Strangers and Brothers. It involves the election of a new Master at narrator Lewis Eliot's unnamed Cambridge College, which resembles Christ's College where Snow was a fellow. The novel is set in 1937, with the growing threat from Nazi Germany as the backdrop. The two candidates are Crawford, who is politically radical and prepared to make sure the college makes a stand against appeasing Hitler, but whom Eliot believes will not be good at dealing with people; and Jago, whom Eliot believes would make a good master, but whose wife is seen by some as a liability. Much of the interest of the novel lies in its analysis of the motives and political manoeuvres of the people campaigning for their chosen candidates.

The novel's dedication is 'In memory of G. H. Hardy', the Cambridge mathematician.

Dramatic versions

Ronald Millar's dramatisation of the novel opened at the Savoy Theatre, London, on 29 May 1963, and ran for eight months. John Clements, who directed it, played Jago, and David Dodimead Lewis Eliot. John Barron was Crawford.

The story was broadcast by BBC Radio in August 1958 in a dramatisation by E. J. King Bull. John Phillips played Eliot, Geoffrey Lumsden Jago and Frederick Treves Crawford.

In the long BBC Radio serialisation of the recently completed Strangers and Brothers sequence in 1971, Geoffrey Matthews was Eliot, Noel Johnson Jago and Alan Wheatley Crawford.

An adaptation of Ronald Millar's stage version was broadcast on the BBC Overseas Service in 1974 with John Pullen as Eliot, Denys Hawthorne as Jago, and Frederick Treves again playing Crawford.

In the BBC's 1984 television serialisation of the sequence, Frederick Treves moved to the part of Vernon Royce, the old and dying Master. Shaughan Seymour played Eliot, John Carson Jago and Clifford Rose Crawford.

In the BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial adaptation by Jonathan Howell [1] of the Strangers and Brothers series, first broadcast in 2003, the parts in The Masters were played by David Haig as Narrator, Adam Godley as Lewis Eliot, Philip Franks as Arthur Brown, Matthew Marsh as Chrystal, David Calder as Jago, Hugh Quarshie as Crawford, Adam Levy as Roy Calvert, Andy Taylor as Francis Getliffe, Clive Merrison as Winslow, Joanna Monro as Alice Jago, Ian Hogg as Sir Horace Timberlake, Peter Howell as Despard-Smith, Anastasia Hille as Sheila Eliot, Patrick Godfrey as Robinson, and Carla Simpson as Betty Vane.

References

The Masters (novel) Wikipedia