Shelley: The Pursuit
By Richard Holmes
Introduction by Richard Holmes
By Richard Holmes
Introduction by Richard Holmes
By Richard Holmes
Introduction by Richard Holmes
By Richard Holmes
Introduction by Richard Holmes
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Paperback $45.00
May 31, 2003 | ISBN 9781590170373
Letters of Note: Sex
The Passion of Ayn Rand
Under the Sun
Emily Dickinson
Lewis Carroll
James Joyce
Henry James: The Young Master
Art and Madness
Seven Voices
Praise
“Richard Holmes’s Shelley: The Pursuit achieves a superlative in biography: its subject’s presence—that of a disturbing, seductive, gifted, destructive man whose essence is mutiny…Holmes tells it all with uncommon facility; his style is precise, knowing, and sinewy….The measure of Holmes’s splendid work is his ability to re-create the magnetism that drew so many people into living Shelley’s fantasies. Holmes makes us feel the combination of originality, intensity, and dependency that made the poet so beguiling.”— Naomi Bliven, The New Yorker
“The best biography of Shelley ever written. The great emphasis that Holmes lays on Shelley’s politics, philosophy, and social activities [takes] the Shelley story out of the realm of myth and makes it far more convincing and significant.”— Stephen Spender
“Holmes is that rare biographer who, despite years of arduous intimacy, still manages to keep his subject in perspective…Now that we no longer recoil from the uses of biography in the understanding of poetry, now that we’re learning again to see the life and work where they belong, together, Richard Holmes’s lively and eloquent book offers one kind of access we can’t afford to ignore.”— Morris Dickstein, The New York Times
“Mr. Holmes, a thorough scholar and a graceful writer, has made good use of new and old facts in this biography, emphasizing both the farsighted shrewdness of Shelley’s political theorizing and the presence, in his private character, of what the author calls ‘calculating duplicity.’”— Phoebe Adams, The Atlantic
“Richard Holmes’s Shelley: The Pursuit achieves a superlative in biography: its subject’s presence—that of a disturbing, seductive, gifted, destructive man whose essence is mutiny…Holmes tells it all with uncommon facility; his style is precise, knowing, and sinewy….The measure of Holmes’s splendid work is his ability to re-create the magnetism that drew so many people into living Shelley’s fantasies. Holmes makes us feel the combination of originality, intensity, and dependency that made the poet so beguiling.”— Naomi Bliven, The New Yorker
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