Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Complete Works: Poetry Plays Letters and Extensive Biographies - Enriched edition A Journey Through Nature Love and Beauty in Poetry and Letters - cover

The Complete Works: Poetry Plays Letters and Extensive Biographies - Enriched edition A Journey Through Nature Love and Beauty in Poetry and Letters

John Keats

Publisher: Good Press

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

John Keats's 'The Complete Works: Poetry, Plays, Letters and Extensive Biographies' offers a comprehensive examination of the poet's oeuvre, showcasing his sensational Romanticism infused with vivid imagery and profound emotional depth. This compilation not only presents his iconic poems such as 'Ode to a Nightingale' and 'Hyperion,' but also includes plays and personal letters that reveal the intricacies of his thoughts on beauty, mortality, and human experience. Keats employs a lyrical style that intertwines personal reflection with universal themes, placing him amidst the pillar of Romantic literature alongside contemporaries like Byron and Wordsworth. Keats, born in 1795 in London, faced a tumultuous life marked by personal loss and health struggles, experiences that deeply informed his writing. His early experiences as an apothecary and his close relationships with fellow writers led him to explore the complexities of emotion and existential contemplation in his works. The influence of Greek mythology and his keen appreciation for nature and art permeate his poetry, distinguishing him as a pivotal figure in the literary canon. For readers and admirers of poetry, 'The Complete Works' serves as an essential resource, inviting them to engage with Keats's passionate exploration of life's fleeting beauty and the creative impulse. Those seeking to understand the Romantic ethos will find in these pages not just poetry, but a lifelong conversation about art and existence.

In this enriched edition, we have carefully created added value for your reading experience:
- A comprehensive Introduction outlines these selected works' unifying features, themes, or stylistic evolutions.
- The Author Biography highlights personal milestones and literary influences that shape the entire body of writing.
- A Historical Context section situates the works in their broader era—social currents, cultural trends, and key events that underpin their creation.
- A concise Synopsis (Selection) offers an accessible overview of the included texts, helping readers navigate plotlines and main ideas without revealing critical twists.
- A unified Analysis examines recurring motifs and stylistic hallmarks across the collection, tying the stories together while spotlighting the different work's strengths.
- Reflection questions inspire deeper contemplation of the author's overarching message, inviting readers to draw connections among different texts and relate them to modern contexts.
- Lastly, our hand‐picked Memorable Quotes distill pivotal lines and turning points, serving as touchstones for the collection's central themes.
Available since: 01/07/2024.
Print length: 1345 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • small (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    small (NHB Modern Plays)

    Holly Robinson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A compassionate and probing exploration of youth and aging, nostalgia and regret, and the dangers of refusing to get old.
    All children grow up, but what if they could grow back down again? A new medical process is being attempted, and it's got an extraordinary aim: attempting to 'de-age' its volunteers back into young children.
    The scientists don't know if it'll work. The doctors aren't sure if it should. And the friends and families of those undergoing the risky procedure can't understand why anybody would willingly do this in the first place… Why would you want to be small again?
    Holly Robinson's play small was first performed at Soho Theatre, London, in a production by Oxford School of Drama.
    
    The Nick Hern Books Multiplay Drama series features large-cast plays specifically written to be performed by and appeal to older teenagers and young adults.
    Show book
  • Three Short Stories & Ten Poems - cover

    Three Short Stories & Ten Poems

    Ernest Hemingway

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    "Three Short Stories & Ten Poems" is a captivating collection that showcases the literary prowess of Ernest Hemingway, one of the most influential writers of the 20th century. This illustrated edition presents a selection of Hemingway's succinct and powerful prose alongside his evocative poetry, inviting readers to explore the themes of love, loss, and the human condition that permeate his work. 
    The three short stories included in this collection exemplify Hemingway's trademark minimalist style, characterized by his use of simple language and understated emotion. Each narrative delves into the complexities of human relationships, revealing the profound impact of seemingly mundane moments. Through his keen observations and vivid imagery, Hemingway captures the essence of life's struggles and triumphs, allowing readers to connect deeply with his characters. 
    Accompanying the stories are ten poems that reflect Hemingway's lyrical sensibility and his ability to convey profound emotions in a few carefully chosen words. The poems, rich with imagery and metaphor, explore themes of nature, war, and the passage of time, further enhancing the reader's experience of Hemingway's literary world.
    Show book
  • Bhagwan Hamara Sathi Hai - cover

    Bhagwan Hamara Sathi Hai

    Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    An audio collection of Hindi devotional poetry. Through these "jewels of wisdom", many have found a new perspective and awareness of life and have achieved an inner serenity.
    Show book
  • Eleonora: The Last Testament of Lady Somerset - The Woman Who Forged Her Own Empire and Learned the True Cost of Love - cover

    Eleonora: The Last Testament of...

    Julian Fortman

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Eleonora of Somerset Hall: A Victorian Romance of Love, Betrayal, and Freedom 
    In Victorian England, Lady Eleonora Somerset is trapped in a gilded cage where her beauty is a commodity and her future a transaction. But beneath her exquisite gowns beats a heart yearning for a fierce, untamed freedom. A loveless marriage teaches her that to survive, she must take control. Her rebellion begins with a stolen, forbidden book, awakening a desire that will change everything. 
    Her quest for freedom leads her from a passionate affair with a charismatic officer to the ruthless salons of Paris. There, she must choose between the intellectual dominance offered by an enigmatic Marquis and the raw power of an American industrialist. 
    Eleonora becomes a formidable queen of her own making, a master of money and influence. But as her power grows, she discovers her throne is the most gilded cage of all, forcing her to confront the heartbreaking cost of the love she abandoned. 
    Perfect for fans of sweeping historical romances with strong female characters, complex moral dilemmas, and the intricate social worlds of Downton Abbey and Philippa Gregory. 
    Will Eleonora find redemption, or is her empire of ashes the last testament of a heart that learned too late? 
     
    Show book
  • Maps You Can't Make - cover

    Maps You Can't Make

    Mariella Saavedra Carquin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Trauma takes up real space within us, and it can be so difficult to hold. How do we access that place of longing and loss, of fragmented memory and grief? How do we carry it as we walk in the world? There’s no map for this, no clear path through the internal landscape it reshapes, no easy way to make meaning of our lives in that disoriented state. Mariella Saavedra Carquin confronts hard truths in this powerful debut collection, pushing through layered complexities of immigration, race, and identity to find a way forward.
    Show book
  • The Rose - Poems - cover

    The Rose - Poems

    Ariana Reines

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In The Rose, award-winning poet Ariana Reines navigates the intersection of power and surrender. Drawing on the history of "romance" as the troubadours knew it and the titular flower's ancient allegories for sexuality and mystery, Reines plunges into feminine archetypes to explore masculine pain: "I have always liked helpless / & terrible men because they break my mind." In these poems, inherited ideologies of gender performance are replaced with bold vulnerability: paradoxes of power and surrender transmute the speaker's understanding of suffering, desire, and the soul. 
     
     
     
    The voice in The Rose is wry and bare, approaching the connection between erotic love and spirituality with humor. Investigating war, maternity, violent sensuality, and the role of language in magical acts, Reines is unafraid to uncover the "secret / & terrible shovelings / Of love," and the result is a bloody and pulsing, sexy and unabashed bloom.
    Show book