Available Formats
Shelley: The Pursuit
By (Author) Richard Holmes
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPerennial
23rd December 2005
3rd October 2005
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Biography: general
821.7
Paperback
848
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 54mm
600g
A fantastic reissue of Richard Holmes epic biography of this most enigmatic and intriguing of the Romantic poets. This is simply one of the greatest biographical achievements of recent years.
Shelley, the most neglected of all the great Romantic poets, was born in Sussex in 1792 and died in Tuscany in 1822, a brief life packed with love affairs, alarums and excursions. Holmess book offers a serious and critical reappraisal of Shelley as a man and a writer; all his prose and poetry is carefully re-examined, his sense of spiritual and geographical isolation brilliantly described and a detailed portrait of his macabre imaginative life slowly assembled.
Shelleys intense friendships with some of the most remarkable figures of his age fill Holmess pages with a vivid parorama of revolutionary idealism and recklessness. To this is added the private story of Shelleys tortuous romantic liaisons, complications which affected both the peculiar tenor of his daily life and the remotest conceptions of his poetry.
This is a stunning, entrancing biography of a fascinating subject, and a timely reissue of an absolutely seminal work.
'If the art of biography was ever damned, Shelley: The Pursuit redeemed it.' New York Times 'The best biography of Shelley ever written ... The great emphasis that Mr. Holmes lays on Shelley's politics, philosophy and social activities corrects the usual view of an extraordinarily idealized, etheral, spiritualized kind of poetry combined with an extraordinarily incoherent life... He has taken the Shelley story out of the realm of myth and made it far more convincing and significant.' Sir Stephen Spender
Richard Holmes is one of Britain's leading biographers. Footsteps, which he published in 1985, was hailed as a 'modern masterpiece'. He is a regular feature writer and reviewer and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He was awarded an OBE in 1992. He lives in London and Norwich with the novelist Rose Tremain.