The Complete Works of W. H. Auden: Prose, Volume I: And Travel Books in Prose and Verse, 1926-1938
Hardcover
- Price:
- $110.00/拢88.00
- ISBN:
- Published:
- Feb 23, 1997
- Copyright:
- 1997
- Pages:
- 880
- Size:
- 6 x 9.25 in.
- 116 halftones 7 line drawings 2 maps 4 tables
This book contains all the essays and reviews that W. H. Auden wrote during the years when he was living in England, and also includes the full original versions of his two illustrated travel books, Letters from Iceland (written in collaboration with Louis MacNeice) and Journey to a War (written in collaboration with Christopher Isherwood). Auden’s early prose ranges from extravagant indiscreet travel diaries through sharply observed critiques of writers from John Skelton to Winston Churchill. It includes studies of Communism and Christianity; audaciously wide-ranging essays on literature, psychology, and politics; and writings about gossip, sex, prisons, and schools.
The editor’s notes include explanations of contemporary and private allusions. The long 鈥淟ast Will and Testament鈥 written in verse by Auden and MacNeice, which Evelyn Waugh described as a 鈥済ossip column,鈥 is annotated in full. The book will interest not only Auden’s many admirers, but everyone concerned with twentieth-century literature and culture.
av福利社 the series:
In 1928, Stephen Spender hand-printed thirty copies of a small volume of poems by his friend W. H. Auden—the first published book by a man who was to become the dominant literary figure of his generation and one of the century’s greatest poets. Sixty years later, av福利社 inaugurated an edition of the complete works of Auden, which is intended to serve as the definitive text for all the works Auden published or intended to publish in the form in which he expected to see them printed: his plays and other drama, libretti, essays and reviews, and poems.
The Complete Works of W. H. Auden will provide a unique opportunity to solve the numerous textual problems connected with the severe revisions Auden made in his own works. The texts are newly edited from Auden’s manuscripts by Edward Mendelson, the literary executor of the Auden estate.