Distributed for Seagull Books
The Waste Land
In Martin Rowson’s The Waste Land, private detective Chris  Marlowe is tasked with getting to the bottom of the most impenetrable of  all modernist mysteries: namely T. S. Eliot’s The Wasteland. Cunningly  contrived, this irreverent graphic parody is inspired in equal parts by  the classic modernist poem and by the American noir novels of Raymond  Chandler. 
Marlowe, searching for his dead partner’s killers, is lured into a  web of murder, deceit, lust, despair and, of course, a frantic quest for  the Holy Grail. Doped, duped, pistol-whipped, framed by the cops and  going nowhere fast, Marlowe enters a nightmare world where Robert Frost,  Norman Mailer and Edmund Wilson drink in the gloom of a London pub;  where Auden is glimpsed entering the men’s room; where Henry James,  Aldous Huxley and Richard Wagner share an ice cream aboard a Thames  pleasure steamer; and where, out of luck and out of clues, Marlowe  finally tracks down T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound.
Available now for the first time in a decade, this is an  unforgettably strange trip through modern literature with one of  Britain’s best of writers and illustrators.