Pages: 127 (Paperback) ISBN: 0571057063 Pub: Faber and Faber Pub date: 2002-02-18 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 21285
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Reader Reviews:A warning about the book description (0/0 people found this helpful)I give the book itself 5 stars. I don't have any comments to add to those already made, but did want to point out one thing:
Striking (6/6 people found this helpful)Eliot's poetry is not for the faint hearted. This collection consits of a range of his poetry from 1917 to 1930.The most famous of course, 'The Waste Land' is all in here. Anyone familiar with the Modernist movenment of the 1920s will easily see why 'The Waste Land' is a firm contender for one of the best pieces of Modernist Literature. It depicts a world that is decaying, spine-less, fruit-less and corrupt. 'The Waste Land' is a very personal analysis of Modern post-war life and I think it's easy to feel that his poetry can be slightly insular, in that it's quite difficult to understand what Eliot is trying to convey to the public, if anything.
The greatest poet of the 20th Century. (18/27 people found this helpful)This is a fantastic book from the greatest poet of the 2oth century. I am a 16 year-old and having just started A level courses, ihave found that my readings of Eliot have helped enormously with my understanding of other poetry. I would argue that if one can come some way to understanding Eliot, then there is nothing out there that one will not understand. He is known for his complexity but this must not be labelled impenetrable, though Eliot's poems are often obscure and challenging there is always a message that Eliot wanted us to see. I have been reading Eliot since I was 15 and my liking of him has grown with age, I also love the victorian poets such as Browning, Empson, Baudelaire, Blake etc and many of the modern poets such as Thomas, Plath and so on but I have always found that there is something extra special about Eliot. His range of poetry is one thing, from the masterpiece of "The Waste Land" to the phillisophical genuis of "Four Quartets", to the humour and sadness of "Prufrock" to the mystery and brilliance of "The Hollow Men" Eliot has everything. I think his poetry is widely mis-understood and critics argue over meaning and miss the point that Eliot placed one's own perception so much higher than accepted views and ideas, hence the fact that he never answered questions on "The Waste Land". Definately buy this book and make up your own mind, learn and gain pleasure from a truly remarkable mind. A Poet who Defined An Age (4/12 people found this helpful)These poems are personally selected by Eliot. They are impassionate and calculating whilst strangely motivating. I am an A - Level student and these poems have provided a motive and modus operandi for my own efforts. Similar ProductsA Student's Guide to the Selected Poems of T.S. Eliot To the Lighthouse (Wordsworth Classics) Selected Poems The "Waste Land" (York Notes Advanced) Heart of Darkness CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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