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OverviewMacDonald Harris's posthumously published novel is set in the 1920's against a backdrop of airships, mysticism, erotic love and a Europe that is picking itself up after WW1. The League of Nations is a giant airship constructed by the same factory in Germany that made the Zeppelins, and is owned by Moira, the leader of a semi-religious cult. The captain is Georg von Plautus, a Prussian WW1 Zeppelin commander who harbours a terrible secret from a bombing raid over London in 1916. Moira's followers have embarked with her on an extraordinary voyage in this airship to a place that she calls Giaconda. The novel explores the lives of these characters on board taking the reader through a heady mix of sexual entanglements, metaphysics, and Blavatsky and Swedenborg influenced séances. Towards the end of the novel it is apparent that all of Moira;s devotees have one thing in common. This is perhaps MacDonald Harris' most surprising novel, even bearing in mind that each one of his 15 published novels never failed to surprise the reader of the preceding one. The Carp Castle was completed shortly before his death in 1993 and seems to have disappeared at this time. Its re-emergence followed the very successful re-publication of his most successful book The Balloonist which left critics in the UK asking for more, and is part of the renaissance of this immensely talented writer who had so many followers and critical admirers in the 1980's. Full Product DetailsAuthor: MacDonald HarrisPublisher: Galileo Publishers Imprint: Galileo Publishers Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 5.10cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 0.281kg ISBN: 9781915530998ISBN 10: 1915530997 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 25 September 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews""Harris weaves a magical web of words in his narrative of mysticism, séances and a dirigible named The League of Nations...The action is inspired and written in undeniably gorgeous prose."" -Kirkus Reviews ""It's a delight. It could be by no-one else--the combination of effortless technical detail and delicate emotional perception is utterly MacDonald Harris, and so is his sense, marvellously deployed here, of the simultaneous tenderness and absurdity of love. His sympathy for such a range of characters in their crazinesses, their various kinds of loneliness, their sheer comedy is wonderful. I think it's one of his very best; what a pity he didn't live to see it published."" -Philip Pullman ""There can no longer be any question whatever that McDonald Harris is one of our major novelists."" -Los Angeles Times Book Review Author InformationMacDonald Harris was the pseudonym of Donald Heiney. He wrote 16 novels and 1 book on sailing (he was in the US Navy during WW2) and lived for most of his life in Newport, California. In 1982 he received a literature award from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences for his entire body of work. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |