"A brilliant tour de force . . . Full of barbed wit and malice-spiked frankness . . . Provoking, stimulating, shocking and dazzling." --THE OBSERVER "Ingenious wit, derisive logic and swiftness of expression . . . Huxley's resources of sardonic invention have never been more brilliantly displayed." --THE TIMES (LONDON) "The Utopia to end Utopias." --THE NEW YORK TIMES " " "An exuberant playground for ideas . . . "Brave New World "(like "Nineteen Eighty-Four") is a novel part of whose instinctive horror is generated by the fact that it foresees a world where novels are no longer possible . . . "Brave New World "presents itself as a measure of what would be lost in the brave new world of AF 632. No more novels, no more Huxleys. A darker than dark age is coming . . . In the meanwhile "Brave New World "remains the most readable of grumpy dystopias." --from the Introduction by John Sutherland