Showing posts with label literature nobel prize winners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literature nobel prize winners. Show all posts

Cursed Days: Diary of a Revolution Review

Cursed Days: Diary of a Revolution
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The previous customer review refers haughtily to the "hauteur" of Ivan Bunin, a "right-wing, upper class novelist." Say what? Bunin, a master of Russian prose, was understandably aghast as he watched the sudden, violent and senseless destruction of the glorious Russian culture. The reviewer sneers that "the folk, in Bunin's opinion, were ignorant, gullible, violent, dirty, and totally unfit to take a hand in government." Well, it sounds like Bunin got it just about right! Just look what the left-wing thugs ruling in the name of "the folk" did to Russia for the next 70 years.
Strangely, Soviet leaders decided that "Cursed Days" was unsuitable for consumption by "the folk." Hmmm... Talk about hauteur! Only in recent years was the publication of this amazing diary permitted in Bunin's homeland, and now - thanks to Thomas Gaiton Marullo's splendid translation - English-speaking readers can finally see that there were some people who weren't fooled in 1917. I just hope that modern readers will read Bunin's prophetic diary of those cursed days... and remember.
Neal McCabe

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Here is Ivan Bunin's great anti-Bolshevik diary of the Russian Revolution, translated into English for the first time. Set against the backdrop of Moscow and Odessa in 1918 and 1919, Cursed Days is a chilling account of the last days of the Russian master in his homeland-a work banned during the years of Soviet power. Bunin recreates the time of revolution and civil war with graphic and gripping immediacy. Unlike the works of early Soviets and emigrés, with their self-censoring backdrop of memory, myth, and political expediency, Bunin's uncompromising truths are jolting. His pain and suffering in witnessing the takeover of his country by 'thugs" and the chaos of civil war, and his fears for the devastation of 'patriarchal" Russian culture, were with him daily and received vivid expression in his diary. Cursed Days foreshadows the later anti-Soviet memoirs of Nadezhda Mandelstam, Evgenia Ginsberg, and others, and the rebellions of Bulgakov and Paternak. Thomas Marullo's superb translation and annotations reveal Bunin not only as a master of prose (he was the first Russian to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature) but as a perceptive social critic engaged in a wrenching struggle to make sense of his shattered world.

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Sunstroke: Selected Stories Review

Sunstroke: Selected Stories
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American and English readers don't generally know the the works of Ivan Bunin, although educated Russians know and love his poetry and short stories, and often can quote them by heart. These stories, unobtrusively translated anew by Graham Hettlinger, vary in length from a couple of pages ('Summer Day', which neatly limns the cruelty arising from boredom) to the seventeen pages of Bunin's best known story, 'The Gentleman from San Francisco.' Most of them, some appearing in English for the first time, are really little more than sharply-etched vignettes which adroitly catch humanity in its variety; sometimes you'll catch your breath with the shock of recognition. If you respond to Chekhov's stories, you'll like these.

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T. S. Eliot (Lives & Legacies (Oxford)) Review

T. S. Eliot (Lives and Legacies (Oxford))
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For an installment in an Oxford University Press series called "Lives and Legacies", T. S. ELIOT contains surprisingly little about Eliot's life and it discusses his legacy even less. What it is is an intelligent and scholarly, yet readable, overview of Eliot's writings, principally his poetry. If, like me, you already are a fan of Eliot's poetry, I recommend the book. If you are not a fan, I doubt this book will turn you into one or otherwise do much for you.
To me, reading the book was most notable for encouraging the reader to look at Eliot's poetry as a body of work, as one extended poem. Over the years I have read many of Eliot's poems multiple times, but - in part, no doubt, because they are so complex and fecund - I have tended to think of the poems, or even discrete parts or stanzas, in isolation. Raine attempts to present Eliot's work as "one significant, consistent and developing personality." Towards that end, he identifies and explicates two overarching themes in particular: the failure to live fully (either as illustrated in the poems or ruefully recognized by many of the voices of the poems), and "classicism", an aesthetic stance that is skeptical of theatrical, exaggerated emotion (i.e., anti-Romantic). Raine also registered a point with me in describing Eliot's poetry as "impersonal", in the sense that in order to appreciate it a reader need know little or nothing about the biographical background of its author (unlike, for example, Sylvia Plath).
Raine makes his way through Eliot's oeuvre more or less chronologically, though his rather brief discussion of "Prufrock" is postponed until the middle of the book. He devotes one chapter each to "The Waste Land" and "Four Quartets", and then individual chapters to Eliot's dramas and to his literary criticism. For me, the first two chapters were the most rewarding, in part because they include insightful discussion of several of the lesser known (and, thus, less written about) poems - for example, "Animula", "Gerontion", and "Marina".
Raine's book is NOT a "reader's guide". He does not attempt, thankfully, to explicate each and every line of each and every poem. He confines himself to the thematic points he wishes to make, and he avoids the drudgery and stuffiness of an Oxford don (though he long taught there). Nonetheless, in discussing sources, models, and influences, he obviously draws on impressive Eliot scholarship. By and large, his writing is spare and taut, somewhat poetic and much less verbose than the typical texts of poetry criticism/exposition. (Still, there are quite a few 50-cent words, such as "oneiric" and "euphistically".)
At the end of this relatively brief book there is a lengthy (30-page) Appendix in which Raine discusses the charge, delivered by many critics, that T.S. Eliot was anti-Semitic. Here the tone of the book changes and Raine engages in rather prosaic academic polemics. I don't follow all of Raine's arguments in defense of Eliot, but then neither do I follow many of the accusers' arguments. For the general reader, it perhaps suffices to report that in Raine Eliot has an intelligent and reasoned defender, and before anyone (based on reading Anthony Julius, George Steiner, Louis Menand, etc.) mentally pigeonholes Eliot as an anti-Semite, in fairness they should read Raine's Appendix.
I bought the so-called "hardcover" edition. It is rather cheap and tacky, surprisingly so for a publication by such an august publishing house. The cover is some sort of pressed cardboard (I don't know the precise term) with a glossy finish on which the cover photo and text are directly emblazoned - i.e., there is no dust jacket. The edges of the pages are almost coterminous with the edges of the cover, and the paper itself is ordinary. The book is "bound" - more accurately, glued - indifferently, so that the first few pages of my copy have been given permanent waves in close to the gathering. These rather mediocre production features probably influence my four-star assessment.

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The Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse (Oxford Books of Verse) Review

The Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse (Oxford Books of Verse)
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Readers of Larkin's excellent letters will have come across frequent complaints about his 'Oxford Book of Two Cent Verse' as he dismissivly calls it. Although he found the task of producing it onerous, it's very good -- if one accepts it for what it is.
Anthologies, having limited space, make a choice between representing the best writers at length, or representing a larger number of writers more briefly. Larkin chooses the latter: the book includes 584 poems by about 200 poets, which this means that many poets (outside the "greats" -- Hardy, Yeats and Eliot -- who are all fully represented) are represented by as little as two poems.
But this approach has virtues. Larkin includes poems by many poets who aren't considered "major writers"; and who, while often well-known in their lives, are not likely to be known to readers now. This is interesting, of course, as it reminds a reader that poets are not only influenced by the best writers, but also by the second best. There is also, perhaps, an attempt here to sketch a certain tradition of English twentieth century writing: one that, although it includes Eliot and Basil Bunting, is in the main, colloquial, unheroic and keen to document domestic events and emotions in poetry that is, if not strictly formal, at least nodding at formal arrangement.
Lovers of Larkin, or of the sort of poetry outlined above, may well find themselves overjoyed by this anthology. Readers whose tastes are for the outlandish, excessive and outragous may be impatient. Personally I think that poetry is at its healthiest when these two groups are not entirely separated: when they both can agree on certain writers to admire; and when both of them at least are aware of and respect the other's tastes.
Perhaps people who find themselves entirely in accord with this anthology should also look at Rosenthal's 'Poetry in English' -- a dull name but a fantastic anthology -- for an alternative view of Twentieth Century poetry. (And perhaps, for fuller coverage of the post-1960s poets, Lucie-Smith's 'British Poetry Since 1945'; and for a look at where this alternative English tradition can lead to, Crozier and Longville's 'A Various Art' or Sinclair's 'Conductors of Chaos'.) And for the opposite group: this anthology, with the reminder that Pound, the key figure in the Modernist movement, thought very highly of the key poetic figure in Larkin's English tradition, Thomas Hardy.

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William Faulkner : Novels 1930-1935 : As I Lay Dying, Sanctuary, Light in August, Pylon (Library of America) Review

William Faulkner : Novels 1930-1935 : As I Lay Dying, Sanctuary, Light in August, Pylon (Library of America)
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There is nothing quantitative in this volume that you can't get in other editions of Faulkner's work; however, the Library of America copy is to be strongly commended for the clarity of its typeface, its sturdy cloth-bound hardcover, and its designed ability to *lie flat* at each page. The only fault I could find with this volume is that it would be nice to have _The Sound and the Fury_ included in a Library of America edition as well (currently, the Modern Library edition is the best that can be done). I strongly recommend this edition to the serious reader who, familiar with Faulkner, is looking for a reference copy of these works that will not deteriorate over time (did I mention acid-free paper and a cloth bookmark?). Considering the price of each of these titles in paperback, this volume's value to the casual reader speaks for itself; you, too, are advised to invest in this worthy tome.

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The Great Weaver from Kashmir Review

The Great Weaver from Kashmir
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That epithet would describe the character, Steinn Ellethi, as he initially appears in this ungainly first novel by the Icelander Halldór Laxness, but it would equally suit the author himself. There are pages and pages of brilliant writing in The Great Weaver, of a sort that preview the originality and pungency of Laxness's later novels, but the whole book is a muddy slog through 436 pages of semi-autobiographical philosophical agony. Possibly every great novelist has to write such a book in order to learn to that 'writing' well isn't enough, and probably most great novelists have the good fortune to lose the manuscript before it's accepted for publication. Above all, dear reader, if you're unacquainted with Laxness, please don't read this novel first. Read "The Fish Could Sing" or "Iceland's Bell", and then go on to "Under the Glacier" and "The Atom Station". If any novelist ever deserved his Nobel Prize, it was Halldór Laxness, who had, as the NYT Book Review declared, "an unearthly ability to find beauty in a landscape of destitution, wisdom in a congress of fools."
Laxness was in the throes of uncertainty about his adopted Catholic religion when he wrote The Great Weaver; one wouldn't need any preface to intuit that fact, since the character Steinn wallows in spiritual turmoil. Steinn is the scion of a powerful and wealthy Icelandic family, a 'golden boy' of overweening talent who aspires to be a great poet. Part Peer Gynt, part Siddhartha, with a spicy glaze of Faust, Steinn leaves Iceland and his childhood friend Diljá to become "perfect." That's his parting explanation of himself to Diljá, the woman who will love him and be destroyed by him. Steinn is every bit as prodigious as he thinks himself to be -- of course -- and probably the most insufferable narcissistic puppy of all of literature. Eventually his quest leads him to monastic Catholicism, which he embraces with the most exquisite heretical perversity. The 'quest' is its own exegesis; Scandinavian writing, from the Viking romances to Peer Gynt to The Great Weaver, is replete with quests that double back in fated failure. Steinn's quest for perfection leads him to the conclusion that he is spiritually worthless, the worst of men, and that that sinfulness is precisely his unique claim to redemption. There's a powerful undercurrent of Catharism in the most austere and mystical forms of Catholicism -- in the life of St. Francis and his 'poveretti' followers, for instance -- and from the external point of view of the reader, Steinn's eventual rejection of the Church seems as inevitable as age. In the meantime, however, Laxness compulsively belabors his holy sinner's stages of self-knowledge in almost embarrassing detail. The novel ends, eventually, with Steinn still a disbelieving devotee of Catholic gnosis and a guest in a Carthusian monastery. Apart from being glad to say good-bye to the arrogant brat, anyone who has read Laxness's later work will be grateful for the knowledge that Laxness himself DIDN'T take the final step into the oblivion of vows.
Women readers should be warned that Steinn is Laxness's mouthpiece for the most odious misogynist rants this side of Saint Paul. On the other hand, Diljá is the one character in the novel whose fate can elicit any sympathy. I'm reminded again of Peer Gynt and of Goethe's Faust, but the redemption that those two 'pilgrims' find in the love of the Eternal Feminine is explicitly rejected -- trampled on! - by Steinn. I'm happy to report that Laxness got this misygynist putrescence out of his bloodstream in this novel, and that the women characters in his later books are as richly multi-faceted and empowered as the women in the Medieval Icelandic sagas.
One final note: if you are yourself a practicing Catholic -- I like that expression PRACTICING in all its possible senses here -- you definitely OUGHT to read this novel, turgid though it be, as a spiritual exercise. Writing it was clearly transformative for its author.

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"[The protagonist's] grand, egotistical journey begins with art and ends with God, taking a path marked out by tormented disquisitions on all manner of existential questions."—New York Times Book Review

"Laxness brought the Icelandic novel out from the saga's shadow. . . . To read Laxness is also to understand why he haunts Iceland—he writes the unearthly prose of a poet cased in the perfection of a shell of plot, wit, and clarity."—Guardian

"Laxness is a poet who writes at the edge of the pages, a visionary who allows us a plot: He takes a Tolstoyan overview, he weaves in a Waugh-like humor: it is not possible to be unimpressed."—Daily Telegraph

"Laxness is a beacon in twentieth-century literature, a writer of splendid originality, wit, and feeling."—Alice Munro

Halldór Laxness' first major novel propels Iceland into the modern world. A young poet leaves the physical and cultural confines of Iceland's shores for the jumbled world of post-WWI Europe. His journey leads the reader through a huge range of moral, philosophical, religious, political, and social realms, exploring, as Laxness expressed it, the "far-ranging variety in the life of a soul, with the swings of a pendulum oscillating between angel and devil." Published when Laxness was twenty-five years old, The Great Weaver from Kashmir's radical experimentation caused a stir in Iceland.

Halldór Laxness is the master of modern Icelandic fiction. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1955 for his "vivid epic power which has renewed the great narrative art of Iceland."

Philip Roughton's translations include Laxness' Iceland's Bell, for which he won the American-Scandinavian Foundation Translation Prize in 2001.


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The Teutonic Knights Review

The Teutonic Knights
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This book was written in 1900. It took the author over four years to write it. I advise anyone interested in literature, not just historical novels, to get this book. It is a monument of extraordinary literature. It is written sharp as a diamond, and throughout the 800 pages, there is no boring paragraph to be found. The plot is so well thought-out that you will be amazed. The last words of the author in the book are "So to you, sacred past, and to you, sacrificial blood, be praise and honor for ever and ever." Not only do you get a great account of life in the middle ages, but also a detailed and fascinating tale of many memorable characters and their adventures. After you read this, I STRONGLY recommend the trilogy. "With Fire and Sword" is a very different book, but just as good, if not better, than this one. "The Deluge" is a very long book: 1800 pages. But don't let that scare you away -- just like "Teutonic Knights," every page is fascinating. And the last volume of the trilogy is "Fire in the Steppe." Right now, Amazon.com is offering the latter two. Get them. It's worth it. "With Fire and Sword" is not available through amazon.com, though, unless you want to get a used one. You might want to try doing it directly through the publisher, Hippocrene books. Once again, for anyone who loves to read, I recommend all four of these books and all of Sienkiewicz's books. Don't let the long name scare you away. In my opinion, he is the greatest author of all time.

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A Fine Balance Review

A Fine Balance
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India, a country I knew little about, haunts me since reading this book. The author captures on paper the feeling of India on every page. The sounds, the smells and the people stay with me well after the last page was turned. Unforgettable characters that evoke every type of emotion!
Rohinton Mistry meshes the lives of four people of diverse backgrounds into a bond that lasts a lifetime. The in-depth look at a culture and a people that I knew little about has brought about an understanding that I previously lacked.
Dina Dalal, widowed and determined to make it as an independent woman in a world where women have little value, becomes the unwilling glue that supports 3 other lives.Maneck Kohlah is a student, sent by his parents from his mountain village to attend school in the city. Ishvar Darji and his nephew Omprakash are tailors escaping the terror in their village by moving to the city to look for work. This unlikely group of people become dependent on each other out of necessity, their lives entangling to create the basis of the story.
This book is written with much sadness as well as humour and has touched a place in my heart. I look forward to reading more by this author in the future. Bravo!

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Eugene O'Neill : Complete Plays 1913-1920 (Library of America) Review

Eugene O'Neill : Complete Plays 1913-1920 (Library of America)
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This is a tremendous source work, providing a sequential study of O'Neill's development as a dramatist. While not all of the plays are particularly successful, they reveal themes and settings that would provide the foundation for the later O'Neill masterworks. And there are many wonderful early dramas, such as the four S.S. Glencairn plays, his first broadway success "Beyond the Horizon," and the daring "Anna Christie," all of which tested and expanded the dramatic form in America. A wonderful collection!

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The Elagin Affair: And Other Stories Review

The Elagin Affair: And Other Stories
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I loved this book. Bunin's lush stories reveal a Russia that even the great geniuses of Russian literature have never quite depicted. His descriptions of physical experience are almost intoxicating, and his careful attention to the vivid details of Russian culture and customs reveal a new side of that country to English langauge readers. I have read Bunin in other translations, but they, by comparison to this one, were awkward and stiff. Here Bunin's sentences move with true elegance.

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The Bluest Eye Review

The Bluest Eye
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The Bluest Eye, the story of a young girl's tortured life, is not a story you can "like". It reads like your worst nightmares, very disturbing and very graphic. It takes a strong stomach to get through this novel. But, this is just what makes the book a masterpiece, that Ms Morrison can draw such powerful feelings from readers. Toni Morrison has grown as a writer. But this book, her first, takes you to a world most didn't know existed and evokes almost unbearably strong emotions. A must read for lovers of great literature. This is not a book you read for pleasure. It's a book you read for the power of the written word.

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Last Looks, Last Books: Stevens, Plath, Lowell, Bishop, Merrill (A W Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts) Review

Last Looks, Last Books: Stevens, Plath, Lowell, Bishop, Merrill (A W Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts)
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I got this when I ordered the new Emily Dickinson review.
For any level of reader the discussions are great, opening up new vistas either in discussion of meter and construction or review of literary precedents used or known by the poet.
For one long out of the field these are great reintroductions to good and great poetry

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In Last Looks, Last Books, the eminent critic Helen Vendler examines the ways in which five great modern American poets, writing their final books, try to find a style that does justice to life and death alike. With traditional religious consolations no longer available to them, these poets must invent new ways to express the crisis of death, as well as the paradoxical coexistence of a declining body and an undiminished consciousness. In The Rock, Wallace Stevens writes simultaneous narratives of winter and spring; in Ariel, Sylvia Plath sustains melodrama in cool formality; and in Day by Day, Robert Lowell subtracts from plenitude. In Geography III, Elizabeth Bishop is both caught and freed, while James Merrill, in A Scattering of Salts, creates a series of self-portraits as he dies, representing himself by such things as a Christmas tree, human tissue on a laboratory slide, and the evening/morning star. The solution for one poet will not serve for another; each must invent a bridge from an old style to a new one. Casting a last look at life as they contemplate death, these modern writers enrich the resources of lyric poetry.


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The Cambridge Introduction to William Faulkner (Cambridge Introductions to Literature) Review

The Cambridge Introduction to William Faulkner (Cambridge Introductions to Literature)
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Attractively designed, this concise and well-written introduction to William Faulkner's life and works will be a welcome addition to library collections serving undergraduates writing papers on this noted Southern writer.
Notes that while there is an enormous body of critical literature on Faulkner, much of it "obscures understanding because of the uneven quality (and varying degrees of accuracy) in such a crowded field of study." Further, because most of these books tend to be easily categorized as "biography, textual analysis, influence study, historiography, and so forth," undergraduates have had the difficult and time-consuming task of having to plow through these lengthy, approach-specific studies to try and develop an overview understanding of this complex writer. It is within this context that Theresa M. Towner -- Professor of Literary Studies at the University of Texas at Dallas -- provides this concise guide to Faulkner's life, works, context and critical reception.
The book is easy to use: Chapter one being comprised of a nine-page, narrative biographical sketch; Chapter two offering two-to-four page, work-by-work discussions of Faulkner's books in chronological order; Chapter three being a placement and discussion of his contribution to American Literature in the context of his time and peers; and, Chapter four being an assessment of the critical reception and commentary of his works. The text is followed by notes, a "Guide to Further Reading" and a brief index.
The value of this book lies in how it serves as a clear, well-written introduction to this complex and challenging Southern writer. Highly recommended for public library collections in the South and all college and university collections.
R. Neil Scott
Middle Tennessee State University

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Nobel laureate William Faulkner is one of the most distinctive voices in American literature. Known for his opaque prose style and his evocative depictions of life in the American South, he is recognised as one of the most important authors of the twentieth century. This introductory book provides students and readers of Faulkner with a clear overview of the life and work of one of America's most prolific writers of fiction. His nineteen novels, including The Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying, Go Down, Moses and Absalom, Absalom! are discussed in detail, as are his major short stories and nonfiction. Focused on the works themselves, but also providing useful information about their critical reception, this introduction is an accessible guide to Faulkner's challenging and complex oeuvre.

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The Collected Works of W.B. Yeats, Vol. 1: The Poems, 2nd Edition Review

The Collected Works of W.B. Yeats, Vol. 1: The Poems, 2nd Edition
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There are two editions of Yeats' poetry with similar titles, this one (The Collected Works of W. B. Yeats: Volume 1: The Poems, edited by Richard Finneran, with 751 pages and published by Macmillan) and The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats (also edited by Finneran, but published by Scribner with only 576 pages).
The Collected Works: Volume 1: The Poems, contains all of Yeats' verse, including the poems from his plays and essays (hence the almost 200 additional pages in length). If you want every poem Yeats wrote, buy this edition.

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Lord of the Flies (50th Anniversary Edition) Review

Lord of the Flies (50th Anniversary Edition)
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"Lord of the Flies" is singularly the most important novel for required reading, whether assigned in school or self-imposed. It regularly appears as number one on my own list of best books.
Let's play "What if." What if a plane carrying a full load of school boys crashes on a deserted island with no adult survivors? What would happen to those boys? What would you expect to happen?
William Golding works with this premise: an idyllic setting, innocent schoolboys. One boy, an older boy just short of teenage years, a boy with fair hair, assumes leadership to stir the others into some semblance of organization and survival mode, much like adults would do if adults were present. He also saw a need to defuse the web of fear of the younger ones. Where are we? How long will we need to wait before someone comes for us? All questions with no answers at this time.
Ah, yes, Golding tells us, everything goes well for a while. But remember the "scar" made by the crashing plane? Something ugly is on this island (but it's not the scar). It's in the bushes, in the dark, in the depths, in the depths of hearts, and it grows like the malignancy it is.
A blatant revelation of what is about to come occurs when Roger silently and stealthily watches a young'un, unbeknownst to the little child. All the young'un is doing is running a stick through the sand, disturbing a crab in a tiny pool of water. Even he imposes control and fear on a helpless creature as Roger boldly picks up a couple of rocks and tosses them the youngster's way. He deliberately misses but comes closer with each throw. Next time he will probably hit the young boy, but not yet. This taboo--deliberately and unnecessarily causing pain to one smaller than you--has not been broken--yet.
Although the dance of the spears, the primeval chants, the attack and killing of the pig, then feasting on its flesh, their kill, are shocking acts of savagery, this event is foreshadowed by the seemingly innocent lob of the stones. From a casual incident, but one with eventual intentionality, the ritualistic slaughter is not so far-fetched or surprising. Golding prepares his readers. This is how the chaos of society starts. It begins with one simple disconnect from the rules. It begins in the minds and hearts. Will I do what society expects? Will I follow the rules to keep things running and working? Do I break a rule or two for my own enhancement. Will I feel a power surge if my rock hits that young `un?
Ralph would probably speak of the terror of knowing that rules WILL be broken. He would speak of the utter horror that any rule can be and will be broken and he won't live to tell about it. Just ask Piggy.
This novel is the only one I taught over and over during the twelve years I worked with high school seniors. My other choices I would switch around those years, drop some, add some. This one I kept. It is that important. I think of "Lord of the Flies" as a necessary manual for societal behavior and an effort to keep the chaos of evil at bay.
Is it even necessary to ask how many times that rock has been thrown since this novel was published in the 1950's? Or how much chaos has imploded so many lives?
Like the way of manuals, some remain in circulation and are deeply read; others fall by the wayside out of disinterest. Some are thrown in the trash. "Lord of the Flies"--what is its current status? And society--how is it doing? Reader, are you a little bit fearful?


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