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Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew - Hardcover

 
9780374280321: Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew
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Title: Some Desperate Glory( The First World War the Poets Knew) <>Binding: Hardcover <>Author: MaxEgremont <>Publisher: FarrarStrausGiroux

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Review:

Praise for "Forgotten Land"

"Egremont's . . . beautifully written volume makes an ideal guide to this shifting, shadowy realm . . . On visiting Kaliningrad in the 1960s, the poet Joseph Brodsky wrote that the trees 'whisper in German.' They don't anymore. But Egremont heard their last words." --Andrew Stuttaford, "The Wall Street Journal"

"Haunting and beautiful, the work of poets such as Robert Graves, Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen continues to fascinate almost 100 years after the war began. . . In his new book, "Some Desperate Glory," historian Max Egremont tells the stories of these half-forgotten poets." --Ruth Styles, "The Daily Mail "(UK)
"Elegant and convincing . . . Egremont's ["Some Desperate Glory"] is an exceptionally thoughtful treatment of 11 complicated men. He lets poignant vignettes take the place of familiar descriptions of the trenches' horrors--from Thomas, on his last night of home leave before his death, tenderly carrying his wife upstairs to bed wrapped in his greatcoat and whispering to her 'all is well between us for ever and ever" to Owen's keen distress as the 'universal perversion of Ugliness' that somehow intensified the death he was surrounded by. Above all, Egremont reminds the reader that the poems record not one amorphous war but 11 individual conflicts." --Michael Prodger, "Evening Standard"
"This is not simply another anthology of the 'best' poetry of the Great War, though, but an attempt to tell the story of the war through its poets and explore their development through the impact of the conflict on their writing. . . "Some Desperate Glory" carries a punch . . . . both [Egremont's] choices and the strict chronology that he imposes on them make certain things strike home with a new freshness." --David Crane, "The Spectator" (London)
Praise for "Forgotten Land"
"Egremont's . . . beautifully written volume makes an ideal guide to this shifting, shadowy realm . . . On visiting Kaliningrad in the 1960s, the poet Joseph Brodsky wrote that the trees 'whisper in German.' They don't anymore. But Egremont heard their last words." --Andrew Stuttaford, "The Wall Street Journal"

Praise for "Forgotten Land"

Haunting and beautiful, the work of poets such as Robert Graves, Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen continues to fascinate almost 100 years after the war began. . . In his new book, "Some Desperate Glory," historian Max Egremont tells the stories of these half-forgotten poets. "Ruth Styles, The Daily Mail (UK)"

Elegant and convincing . . . Egremont's ["Some Desperate Glory"] is an exceptionally thoughtful treatment of 11 complicated men. He lets poignant vignettes take the place of familiar descriptions of the trenches' horrors--from Thomas, on his last night of home leave before his death, tenderly carrying his wife upstairs to bed wrapped in his greatcoat and whispering to her 'all is well between us for ever and ever" to Owen's keen distress as the 'universal perversion of Ugliness' that somehow intensified the death he was surrounded by. Above all, Egremont reminds the reader that the poems record not one amorphous war but 11 individual conflicts. "Michael Prodger, Evening Standard"

This is not simply another anthology of the best' poetry of the Great War, though, but an attempt to tell the story of the war through its poets and explore their development through the impact of the conflict on their writing. . . "Some Desperate Glory" carries a punch . . . . both [Egremont's] choices and the strict chronology that he imposes on them make certain things strike home with a new freshness. "David Crane, The Spectator (London)"

Egremont's . . . beautifully written volume makes an ideal guide to this shifting, shadowy realm . . . On visiting Kaliningrad in the 1960s, the poet Joseph Brodsky wrote that the trees whisper in German.' They don't anymore. But Egremont heard their last words. "Andrew Stuttaford, The Wall Street Journal on Forgotten Land""

"Haunting and beautiful, the work of poets such as Robert Graves, Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen continues to fascinate almost 100 years after the war began. . . In his new book, Some Desperate Glory, historian Max Egremont tells the stories of these half-forgotten poets." --Ruth Styles, The Daily Mail (UK)

"Elegant and convincing . . . Egremont's [Some Desperate Glory] is an exceptionally thoughtful treatment of 11 complicated men. He lets poignant vignettes take the place of familiar descriptions of the trenches' horrors--from Thomas, on his last night of home leave before his death, tenderly carrying his wife upstairs to bed wrapped in his greatcoat and whispering to her 'all is well between us for ever and ever" to Owen's keen distress as the 'universal perversion of Ugliness' that somehow intensified the death he was surrounded by. Above all, Egremont reminds the reader that the poems record not one amorphous war but 11 individual conflicts." --Michael Prodger, Evening Standard

"This is not simply another anthology of the 'best' poetry of the Great War, though, but an attempt to tell the story of the war through its poets and explore their development through the impact of the conflict on their writing. . . Some Desperate Glory carries a punch . . . . both [Egremont's] choices and the strict chronology that he imposes on them make certain things strike home with a new freshness." --David Crane, The Spectator (London)

"Egremont's . . . beautifully written volume makes an ideal guide to this shifting, shadowy realm . . . On visiting Kaliningrad in the 1960s, the poet Joseph Brodsky wrote that the trees 'whisper in German.' They don't anymore. But Egremont heard their last words." --Andrew Stuttaford, The Wall Street Journal on Forgotten Land

Book Description:
After his highly successful history of Prussia, the authorized biographer of Siegfried Sassoon examines the First World War through the lives of the poets who fought at the front.

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  • PublisherFarrar Straus Giroux
  • Publication date2014
  • ISBN 10 0374280320
  • ISBN 13 9780374280321
  • BindingHardcover
  • Number of pages337
  • Rating

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780374535445: Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew

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ISBN 10:  0374535442 ISBN 13:  9780374535445
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2015
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  • 9781447241997: Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew

    Picador, 2014
    Hardcover

  • 9781447242000: Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew

    Pan Ma..., 2015
    Softcover

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