To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Reading Chaucer's Poems: A Guided Selection

Hardback

Main Details

Title Reading Chaucer's Poems: A Guided Selection
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Bernard O'Donoghue
By (author) Geoffrey Chaucer
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 210,Width 161
Category/GenrePoetry by individual poets
ISBN/Barcode 9780571230655
ClassificationsDewey:821.1
Audience
General
Edition Main

Publishing Details

Publisher Faber & Faber
Imprint Faber & Faber
Publication Date 20 August 2015
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Geoffrey Chaucer is rightly regarded as the Father of English Literature. His observant wit, his narrative skill and characterization, his linguistic invention, have been a well from which the language's greatest writers have drawn: Shakespeare, Pope, Austen, Dickens among them. A courtier, a trade emissary and diplomat, he fought in the Hundred Years War and was captured and ransomed; his marriage into the family of John of Gaunt ensured his influence in political society. For more than a decade, he was engaged on his most famous work of all, The Canterbury Tales, until his death around 1400; there is no record of the precise date or the circumstances of his demise, despite vivid and colourful speculation. Bernard O'Donoghue is one of the country's leading poets and medievalists. His accessible new selection includes a linking commentary on the chosen texts, together with a comprehensive line-for-line glossary that makes this the most approachable and accessible introduction to Chaucer that readers can buy.

Author Biography

Bernard O'Donoghue was born in Cullen, Co. Cork in 1945. He is a Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, where he teaches Medieval English. He has published four collections of poetry, The Weakness (1991), Gunpowder (winner of the 1995 Whitbread Award for Poetry), Here Nor There (1999) and Outliving (2003).

Reviews

"'Faber has a poetry list worth bragging about. What other publisher could conjure up a series like this?' The Times"