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Oscar Wilde: A Life in Letters
 
 
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Oscar Wilde: A Life in Letters [Hardcover]

Merlin Holland , Oscar Wilde
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate; New Ed edition (3 Nov 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007161034
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007161034
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 15.4 x 4.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 635,453 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

ON THE COMPLETE LETTERS OF OSCAR WILDE:

‘The long serpentine line of Oscar Wilde's career is traced here like some fiery scarlet thread. This is a marvellous volume, fully worthy of Wilde's own genius.' The Times

'A whole world is here. *****' Mail on Sunday

'The year's unputdownable joy.' Spectator

'The next best thing to Wilde's own presence. Opening this book, one walks into the company of a spirit so large and generous, of such dash and charm, that one is grateful such largesse has been captured at the very moment it is being distributed – to those recipients who were once as eager, as amused, as captivated as the readers of these letters will be today.' Irish Times

'Nowhere does he seem more sympathetic, or more engaging. The letters bring you as close as you can get to the man himself – warts and all, but magic and all as well. You get a wonderful sense, such as even the best biography couldn't quite give, of Wilde in action from day to day – living in the thick of society, hustling his career forward. Perpetually gripping.' Sunday Telegraph

'Here we have the whole triumph-to-tragedy in the writer's own wonderful words.' Literary Review

'There is something characteristic, instructive or amusing on almost every page. The letters reveal the whole man, in all his splendour. He famously said that he put his genius into his life and only his talent into his work, and as you read these letters, you get a sense of someone writing his own life, creating himself as he went along.' Evening Standard

'A joy to read. These copiously annotated letters are an admirable addition to the Wilde canon and should be read as a supplement and corrective to the flood of biographies and critical studies.' Irish Independent

'Impeccable. The letters bear comparison with any more conventional form of literary art. They are filled with the terror and the pity of Wilde's extravagant career, not untouched by pathos, and irradiated always by perpetual and wilful laughter.' Times Literary Supplement

'Marvellous. Reading the letters through from the beginning, one is able to watch the
development of a stunning personality.' Independent on Sunday

'Almost like living his life with him.' Daily Mail

'Meticulously edited by Wilde's grandson Merlin Holland. Compelling and of enduring importance.' Independent

'These letters give us the human side of Wilde's legend and its human cost.' Observer

'The letters will probably turn out to be his lasting memorial: witty, humane, confidential, sympathetic in a way that the public figure was not.' Sunday Times

Product Description

Wilde the writer is known to us from his plays and prose fiction, but apparently it was in his conversation that his genius reached its summit. His talk is lost and his autobiography was never written, but his letters reveal him at his spontaneous, sparkling best.

Wilde the writer is known to us from his plays and prose fiction, yet it was in his conversation that his genius reached its summit. His talk is lost, his autobiography was never written, but his letters reveal him at his spontaneous, sparkling best.

Of all nineteenth-century letter writers Oscar Wilde is, predictably, one of the most brilliant. Wonderfully fluent in style, the letters bear that most familiar of Wildean hallmarks – the lightest of touches for the most serious of subjects. He comments openly on his life and his work from the early years of undergraduate friendship, through his year-long lecture tour in America as a striving young 'Professor of Aesthetics', to the short period of fame and success in the early 1890s, when he corresponded with many leading political, literary and artistic figures of the time. Disgrace and imprisonment followed, but even in adversity his humour does not desert him.

In this beautifully produced volume Merlin Holland has brought together his most revealing letters with an illuminating commentary. Together they form the closest thing we shall ever have to Wilde's own memoir.


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5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent introduction to Wilde's 'venturous poesy', 22 April 2001
By A Customer
This charming little volume offers a glittering selection of Wilde's poetry. Like all of the titles in the Everyman's Poetry series, it has the virtue of being inexpensive and portable. It also contains a biographical note, very useful chronologies of Wilde's life and times, a valuable and readable Introduction, and informative notes. All this guarantees its appeal to the general reader and makes it accessible to final year secondary and undergraduate students who, all too often these days, are introduced to the works of poets via a narrow selection in an anthology.

I bought my copy to determine whether I should purchase multiple copies for my English Studies class with which I aimed to read some of Wilde's 'political' and Roman Catholic 'devotional' poems - such as 'San Miniato', 'Madonna Mia' and 'On hearing the Dies Irae sung in the Sistine Chapel' - while also exploring some crucial literary distinctions between plagiarism, imitation and stylization. Despite the absence of 'Sonnet on the Massacre of the Christians in Bulgaria' - which I'd wanted to place alongside Milton's 'On the Late Massacre in Piedmont' - I found that the volume would fulfil our needs admirably, and offer much more besides.

My previous familiarity with Wilde's poems - apart from his famous 'Ballad of Reading Gaol' which concludes the selection made here - had been restricted to a precious copy of the fourth edition. Simply titled Poems., this was published in 1882 by David Bogue on Dutch hand made paper and is exquisitely bound in parchment heavily embossed with small flowers of gold. While Mighall includes some of the poems which Wilde had placed musically there under the section headings of 'Eleutheria', 'Rosa Mystica', 'Wind Flowers', 'Flowers of Gold' and 'The Fourth Movement', he has also carefully chosen many later poems to show the poet's versatility and the development of his pictorial 'Impressionistic' style, with its gem-like imagery, as in 'Symphony in Yellow':

The yellow leaves begin to fade/And flutter from the Temple elms,/And at my feet the pale green Thames/Lies like a rod of rippled jade.

Wilde's later erotic, outre 'Symbolist' and 'Decadent' style is also well represented, for example, in 'The Sphinx':

His face was as the must that lies upon a vat of new-made/wine:/ The seas could not insapphirine the perfect azure of his /eyes./ His thick soft throat was white as milk and threaded with/ thin veins of blue:/ And curious pearls like frozen dew were broidered on his/ flowing silk.

Or:

What songless tongueless Ghost of Sin crept through the/ curtains of the night,/ And saw my taper burning bright, and knocked, and bade/ you enter in.

Heady stuff. And certainly not 'Swinburne and water'!

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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Oscar Wilde and Jacques Derrida, or bring in your ghosts, 25 April 2001
By A Customer
The most memorable or 'haunting' poem in this collection is 'The Ballad of Reading Gaol'. With its 'realism' and provocative didacticism, it raises questions not so much about psychology and the anxiety of, or instrumental nature of, 'influence' as about justice and the human condition. Questions about 'the darkening prison house of the modern world', about the naming of spectres and acknowledging their gifts ...

Is 'God's kindly earth' 'kindlier than men know'?

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Story of How to Enjoy Life and Be Miserable -- All at Once, 3 Feb 2003
By paisleymonsoon - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Oscar Wilde: Including My Memories of Oscar Wilde by George Bernard Shaw (Paperback)
I picked this book up in a used book store for [money] more than when it was purchased new in 1960. The pages literally crumbled as I turned them, but I couldn't put the book down. I was enthralled with the life of Oscar Wilde. Now, this biography isn't one written years after the subject's death from scraps of information. No. This is written by a very close friend of Wilde's, Frank Harris. In being written by someone of such closeness, it lends credence to the harsh words the author had to say of Wilde. Harris calls him lazy and slothenly. Of course, Wilde caused quite a sensation in his time. He was imprisoned under other pretenses, but mainly because he was a homosexual in a time period when this was not acceptable. Oscar was one who did not care what others thought of him. He was determined to live a life of pleasure and to make money doing things that he liked: writing and speaking. However, he did a great deal of leaching off of others. There's no denying Wilde's genius. I have yet to read any of his works except for a short essay entitled "The Soul of Man Under Socialism." To me, the thoughts seemed profound. But Harris says that Oscar never said or wrote anything original; he merely took other people's thoughts, meshed them together, and said them in a more profound way. This is a biography that reads like a fine story. Harris is a great writer and has more first-hand knowledge of his subject than any other biographer that I've read. I'd reccomend this book to others without reservation.

7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "The best life of Oscar Wilde", said George Bernard Shaw., 8 July 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Oscar Wilde: Including My Memories of Oscar Wilde by George Bernard Shaw (Paperback)
"The best life of Oscar Wilde", said George Bernard Shaw after reading this book. I cannot but agree with him utterly. No unnecesary data is wasted, no long reflexions bore us. It's just an Oscar's very close friend telling us with great elegance and delicacy the story of one he has admired and loved so much, but without fear of saying the truth. Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas. Of course, the reader has to know Mr Harris is the true "lead actor" in the story he's telling us, always supporting the Truth and the Right. But one can easily forgive him for that in reward for the great moments un Oscar's life he's saved from oblivion and darkness. A wonderful work of art itself, this biography must be read by every admirer of that Prince of Charm Oscar Wilde was. X. Careaga

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars biography as art, 21 April 2005
By Pit O'Maley "Moon Man" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Oscar Wilde: Including My Memories of Oscar Wilde by George Bernard Shaw (Paperback)
One cannot improve upon the remarks fore-mentioned of George Bernard Shaw's. Long before public figures of no talent were thrust upon us, literate minds instead of marketeers gathered around the chosen few as johnny-come-latelys and would rarely disappoint. This is a thrilling,gripping read.Style,tact and endless grace in words for a tragic,painful public artist run throughout this personal account.Much can be gained from savoring this moment in time if one aspires celebrity and fame and wants to avoid its dizzying pitfalls.
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