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Strangers and Brothers
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==Plot== All eleven novels in the series are narrated by the character Lewis Eliot. The series follows his life and career from humble beginnings in an English provincial town, to reasonably successful London lawyer, to Cambridge don, to wartime service in Whitehall, to senior civil servant and finally retirement. ''[[The New Men]]'' deals with the scientific community's involvement in (and reaction to) the development and deployment of nuclear weapons during the Second World War. ''[[The Conscience of the Rich]]'' concerns a wealthy, Anglo-Jewish merchant-banking family. ''[[Time of Hope]]'' and ''[[George Passant]]'' depict the price paid by clever, poor young men to escape their provincial origins. Snow analyses the professional world, scrutinising microscopic shifts of power within the enclosed settings of a Cambridge college, a Whitehall ministry, a law firm. For example, in the novels set in the Cambridge college (a thinly veiled [[Christ's College, Cambridge|Christ's]]), a small, disparate group of men is typically required to reach a collective decision on an important subject. In ''The Masters'', the dozen or so college members elect a new head (the Master) by majority vote. In ''The Affair'', a small group of dons sets out to correct a possible injustice: they must convince the rest of the college to re-open an investigation into scientific fraud. In both novels, the characters strongly resist letting in the external world, whether it be the press, public opinion, the college [[Visitor]], or outside experts.
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