Vile Bodies is Evelyn Waugh's sharp and unsparing satire of interwar British society. Set among London's restless young elite, the novel follows a loose circle of socialites whose lives revolve around parties, gossip, money troubles, and emotional detachment, all unfolding against a backdrop of impending collapse.
Waugh's style is fast, clipped, and deliberately superficial. Dialogue replaces introspection, events blur into one another, and significance is flattened into spectacle. Beneath the comedy lies a precise moral vision: a society incapable of seriousness, drifting toward disorder without fully perceiving it.
Cool, brittle, and exact, Vile Bodies remains one of the defining satirical novels of the twentieth century, capturing a world governed by appearances as it moves steadily toward exhaustion.
