Description

Book Synopsis
Poetry of Personality, on the hundredth anniversary of Dylan Thomasâs birth, is a must-read for both Thomasâs fans and newcomers interested in an introduction to his works and the unique sensibility that created them. It explores the heart and mind behind the poems, and shows why his work will always remain in the top rank of English poetry.

Trade Review
A poet himself, Greenway points out in his introduction that Thomas (1914–1953) is known for his difficulty and his sonority and that his poetic diction has long been 'a source of critical debate.' Throughout this analysis/appreciation of Thomas's work, Greenway focuses on the tension between the simplicity of his vocabulary and the 'difficulty' of his poetry. Taking a human approach to Thomas’s life, personality, and technique—with full recognition of the mountain of critical attention on Thomas's modest poetic output—Greenway demonstrates how knowing Thomas’s life story helps one understand the diction of his poetry. Against the charge of eccentricity, the author discusses Thomas’s unusual perspectives and his use of irony, paradox, and other linguistic forms. Thomas's unique concern with sound prompts Greenway to closely study Thomas's vocabulary and syntax, demonstrating how the poetry imitates the natural world. He also examines Thomas’s poetic diction in conjunction with Welsh culture and language. Greenway clearly agrees with Robert Lowell, who wrote that 'nothing could be more wrongheaded, than the English disputes about Dylan Thomas's greatness. . . .He is a dazzling obscure writer who can be enjoyed without understanding.'. . . .Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE *
When I first encountered the poetry of Dylan Thomas in 1955, I was twenty years old and a junior in college. Thomas's poetry has been a consistent and salutary staple in my literary diet from that point forward. Not until I completed and absorbed William Greenway's study, however, have I felt that I truly managed to meet Thomas on the only terms that make sense—his own. If you read Dylan Thomas: The Poetry of Personality as carefully and creatively as Greenway tells you to read Dylan Thomas's poetry, then you won't have any trouble understanding and relishing both poets, and you will sing in your chains like the sea. -- Dale H. Edmonds, Tulane University
William Greenway, an award-winning poet and literary scholar of Welsh descent, has the perfect credentials to investigate the poetry of Dylan Thomas. In Greenway’s convincing study of Thomas as ‘an adorer of words,’ he offers even the reader skeptical of the poet’s achievements a clear and elegant entry into Thomas’s work, however dazzling and knotty the poem. -- Elton Glaser, University of Akron

Table of Contents
Table of Contents Introduction Chapter 1: “The Flesh’s Vision”: The Poetic Perspectives of Dylan Thomas Chapter 2: “The Churning Bulk of Words” Chapter 3: The Sound of Shape Chapter 4: “To Wales in My Arms”: Dylan Thomas’s Celtic Debt Chapter 5: “The Flood Flowers Now” Chapter 6: The Once and Future Dylan: The Recent Criticism Bibliography

The Poetry of Personality The Poetic Diction of

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    A Hardback by William Greenway

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 12/24/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739192986, 978-0739192986
      ISBN10: 0739192981

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Poetry of Personality, on the hundredth anniversary of Dylan Thomasâs birth, is a must-read for both Thomasâs fans and newcomers interested in an introduction to his works and the unique sensibility that created them. It explores the heart and mind behind the poems, and shows why his work will always remain in the top rank of English poetry.

      Trade Review
      A poet himself, Greenway points out in his introduction that Thomas (1914–1953) is known for his difficulty and his sonority and that his poetic diction has long been 'a source of critical debate.' Throughout this analysis/appreciation of Thomas's work, Greenway focuses on the tension between the simplicity of his vocabulary and the 'difficulty' of his poetry. Taking a human approach to Thomas’s life, personality, and technique—with full recognition of the mountain of critical attention on Thomas's modest poetic output—Greenway demonstrates how knowing Thomas’s life story helps one understand the diction of his poetry. Against the charge of eccentricity, the author discusses Thomas’s unusual perspectives and his use of irony, paradox, and other linguistic forms. Thomas's unique concern with sound prompts Greenway to closely study Thomas's vocabulary and syntax, demonstrating how the poetry imitates the natural world. He also examines Thomas’s poetic diction in conjunction with Welsh culture and language. Greenway clearly agrees with Robert Lowell, who wrote that 'nothing could be more wrongheaded, than the English disputes about Dylan Thomas's greatness. . . .He is a dazzling obscure writer who can be enjoyed without understanding.'. . . .Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE *
      When I first encountered the poetry of Dylan Thomas in 1955, I was twenty years old and a junior in college. Thomas's poetry has been a consistent and salutary staple in my literary diet from that point forward. Not until I completed and absorbed William Greenway's study, however, have I felt that I truly managed to meet Thomas on the only terms that make sense—his own. If you read Dylan Thomas: The Poetry of Personality as carefully and creatively as Greenway tells you to read Dylan Thomas's poetry, then you won't have any trouble understanding and relishing both poets, and you will sing in your chains like the sea. -- Dale H. Edmonds, Tulane University
      William Greenway, an award-winning poet and literary scholar of Welsh descent, has the perfect credentials to investigate the poetry of Dylan Thomas. In Greenway’s convincing study of Thomas as ‘an adorer of words,’ he offers even the reader skeptical of the poet’s achievements a clear and elegant entry into Thomas’s work, however dazzling and knotty the poem. -- Elton Glaser, University of Akron

      Table of Contents
      Table of Contents Introduction Chapter 1: “The Flesh’s Vision”: The Poetic Perspectives of Dylan Thomas Chapter 2: “The Churning Bulk of Words” Chapter 3: The Sound of Shape Chapter 4: “To Wales in My Arms”: Dylan Thomas’s Celtic Debt Chapter 5: “The Flood Flowers Now” Chapter 6: The Once and Future Dylan: The Recent Criticism Bibliography

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