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E-book: How to Think Like a Poet: The Poets That Made Our World and Why We Need Them

4.22/5 (33 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Format: 320 pages
  • Series: How To Think
  • Pub. Date: 29-Aug-2024
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Continuum
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781399408257
  • Format - PDF+DRM
  • Price: 13,91 €*
  • * the price is final i.e. no additional discount will apply
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  • This ebook is for personal use only. E-Books are non-refundable.
  • Format: 320 pages
  • Series: How To Think
  • Pub. Date: 29-Aug-2024
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Continuum
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781399408257

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An entertaining guide to history's most influential and inspiring poets – from Homer and Sappho to Shakespeare and Frank O'Hara – and how they can teach us to better understand the world around us.

How did the greatest poets in history make the world anew? And what can we learn from the magic, wisdom and humour of their poetry? From the genius of the Greeks and Romans through the love and metaphysics of the Middle Ages, through to the Beat Poets of San Francisco, this is the ultimate guide to the greatest writers of the human age.

Through short, biographical portraits, poet and teacher Dai George provides an entertaining introduction to how to think like a poet, and how we can weave that thinking into our everyday lives. He addresses questions poets have grappled with: What is it to describe the world? How can we express love, grief, or friendship? How can we rise above the misery of the world and see the beauty in the everyday?

This book paints vivid pictures of a global assortment of renowned poets throughout history: from Sappho, Juvenal and LiXu, to William Shakespeare and John Donne, to Frank O Hara, Pablo Neruda and Sylvia Plath. George also seeks to re-examine the canon, in which overwhelmingly Western, white and male poets have been held up as pillars of the art, and bring to light major figures from other important cultures and communities, including China, pre-colonial America and Japan.

Reviews

An entertaining guide to the rhyme and reason of poetry capacious and curious. George has an admirable ability to get to the heart of things in just a few lines. Dai George distils a lifetimes poetic thinking and reading into this warm, accessible book. * The Idler * This is a wonderfully lucid and compelling account of how poetry works and why it matters. In 24 exhilarating chapters, George guides us from Homers Iliad to the Instapoetry of today. A triumph in both concept and execution, How to Think Like a Poet fizzes almost audibly with intellectual energy and excitement. * Mark Ford, Professor of English Literature, University College London * With an infectious delight in his material, Dai George is a sure and skilful guide through some of poetrys most significant waters, opening our eyes to its everyday wonders. Thanks to its consciously global canvas, How to Think Like a Poet does something rather different to your usual poetic history or handbook, opening up fresh connections and avenues of thought across its chapters. George's agile, luminous, refreshing readings of individual poets down the centuries reveal just how much they have to offer us today. * Sarah Howe, British poet and lecturer in poetry at Kings College, London * Poetry haters will fall in love with poetry and the poetry lover will walk away refreshed after reading just a few pages of this authoritative, wide-ranging and witty book that is persistently fascinating and always an easy read! * Daljit Nagra, British poet and author of Indiom *

More info

An entertaining guide to history's most influential and inspiring poets from Homer and Sappho to Shakespeare and Frank O'Hara and how they can teach us to better understand the world around us.
Introduction
1 How to Think Like Homer
2 How to Think Like Sappho
3 How to Think Like Li Bai
4 How to Think Like Jalal al-Din Rumi
5 How to Think Like Dante Alighieri
6 How to Think Like Geoffrey Chaucer
7 How to Think Like William Shakespeare
8 How to Think Like John Donne
9 How to Think Like John Milton
10 How to Think Like Matsuo Basho
11 How to Think Like William Wordsworth
12 How to Think Like Walt Whitman
13 How to Think Like Emily Dickinson
14 How to Think Like Rabindranath Tagore
15 How to Think Like T. S. Eliot
16 How to Think Like Langston Hughes
17 How to Think Like Pablo Neruda
18 How to Think Like Elizabeth Bishop
19 How to Think Like Aimé Césaire
20 How to Think Like Dylan Thomas
21 How to Think Like Frank OHara
22 How to Think Like Sylvia Plath
23 How to Think Like Audre Lorde
24 How to Think Like a Contemporary Poet
Acknowledgements
Permissions
Index
Dai George is a poet, novelist, critic and academic. His first poetry collection, The Claims Office, was an Evening Standard book of the year. He is the former reviews editor of Poetry London and has taught creative writing for many years at various universities. He is currently Lecturer in Creative Arts and Humanities at UCL.

His poetry has appeared widely in magazines and anthologies. His criticism and non-fiction features in popular and academic forums including the Guardian, The White Review, and Cambridge Quarterly.