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George MacBeth (1932–1992)

Author of The New Poetry

54+ Works 890 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Born in the Scots mining village of Shotts but educated at King Edward VII School in Sheffield, Yorkshire, George MacBeth graduated with first-class honors from New College, Oxford. In the late 1950's, he belonged to The Group, an informal association of young writers, mostly poets, which in 1965 show more became the more structured Writers' Workshop. For 21 years, beginning in 1955, MacBeth produced programs on poetry and the arts for the BBC. Both the oral presentations of The Group and the BBC broadcasts whetted MacBeth's interest in the oral aspect of his own work. He has published numerous volumes of poetry, along with plays and (beginning in 1975) novels. A prolific poet, MacBeth has worked in an almost chameleonlike variety of forms and styles. This eclecticism has made it difficult to establish a distinctive voice, yet his different styles have influenced numerous contemporaries in England. He has also tried to keep his poems accessible to the general public, and has achieved a reasonably wide popularity. Sometimes didactic, MacBeth often treats his subjects---death and life, war and love, tradition and the present day---with a linguistic playfulness that delights in the resources of language itself. His rephrasing of John Keats's "Ode on a Grecian Urn" and pseudotranslations of Chinese poetry are memorably comic. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by George MacBeth

The New Poetry (1962) — Contributor — 269 copies
The Book of Cats (1976) — Editor — 107 copies
Poetry 1900 to 1975 (1979) — Editor — 95 copies
Poetry 1900 to 1965 (1967) — Editor — 51 copies
The Penguin Book of Sick Verse (1963) — Editor — 48 copies
The Samurai (1975) 28 copies
The Penguin Book of Animal Verse (1965) — Editor — 26 copies
The seven witches (1978) 18 copies
Anna's Book (1983) 17 copies
The Rectory Mice (1982) 15 copies
The Transformation (1975) 12 copies
Jonah and the Lord (1969) 12 copies
Poems from Oby (1982) 11 copies
The Night of Stones (1968) 8 copies
The survivor (1977) 8 copies
Collected Poems (1971) 8 copies
The Katana (1983) 7 copies
The Orlando poems (1971) 6 copies
A War Quartet. (1970) 5 copies
Born Losers (1981) 5 copies
Poetry for Today (Longman study texts) (1984) — Editor — 5 copies
The Colour of Blood (1967) 5 copies
Anatomy of a Divorce (1988) 4 copies
Buying a Heart (1978) 4 copies
Dizzy's Woman (1986) 3 copies
SAMURAI (1976) 3 copies
The long darkness (1984) 3 copies
Another Love Story (1991) 3 copies
The Testament of Spencer (1992) 3 copies
The Patient (1992) 3 copies
The burning cone (1970) 2 copies
Poems of Love and Death (1980) 2 copies
Selected Poems (2002) 2 copies
A Child of War (1987) 2 copies
Cleaver Garden (1986) 1 copy
The Lion of Pescara (1984) 1 copy
Lusus: A verse lecture (1972) 1 copy
THE COLOUR OF BLOOD (1999) 1 copy
A poet's year (1973) 1 copy
The screens 1 copy

Associated Works

The Faber Book of Modern Verse (1936) — Contributor, some editions — 289 copies
British Poetry Since 1945 (1970) — Contributor, some editions — 167 copies
SF12 (1968) — Contributor — 138 copies
11th Annual Edition: The Year's Best S-F (1966) — Contributor — 116 copies
Emergency Kit (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 109 copies
New Worlds: An Anthology (1983) — Contributor — 107 copies
Science Fiction: The Future (1971) — Contributor — 85 copies
England Swings SF: Stories of Speculative Fiction (1968) — Contributor — 80 copies
The New SF (1969) — Contributor — 63 copies
Best SF Stories from New Worlds 3 (1968) — Contributor — 57 copies
Atomic Ghost: Poets Respond to the Nuclear Age (1995) — Contributor — 30 copies
Political science fiction;: An introductory reader (1974) — Contributor — 13 copies
Nothing Solemn: An anthology of comic verse (1973) — Contributor — 3 copies

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Reviews

The Seven Witches is the second of three sexed-up espionage novels centered on the "licensed to screw" British secret service agent Cadbury. Despite her name's apparent reference to chocolate, the focal honeypot is a blonde.

The title and lurid cover of this pocket paperback had me thinking it would have more occult content than it does. There is one somewhat tawdry ceremonial episode in the eleventh chapter, but the plot revolves around international oil politics, elite prostitution, clandestine pharmaceuticals, and personal revenge. Characters, including the protagonist, are largely unsympathetic. The intelligence establishment and political players are corrupt. The criminal antagonists are fanatical and often myopic.

Author Macbeth disdains the use of punctuation to indicate dialogue, and does a fine job of identifying it through context. All of the action takes place over a single week, although there is a fair amount of reference back to events in the previous Cadbury book, as well as a scene-setting prologue that takes place prior to Cadbury's bygone recruitment.

This book wasn't a chore to read, but I doubt that I will bother with either its predecessor or its sequel.
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1 vote
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paradoxosalpha | Apr 28, 2020 |
In presentation, this book is pure 1970s cheese. The cover features the face of an effeminate male (distinguished only by his moustache), with a naked woman emerging from a vaginal opening between his eyebrows. She is spread-eagled, bent over backwards, with her arms buried in his hair and her assets thrust out for all to see - because, really, what else would you do after climbing out of a cranial-vagina?

It's a shame the cover is so garish and obscene, because the story inside is so very not. Instead, it's subtle, poetic, dreamlike, and vague . . . a story that settles for invoking curiosity instead of arousal. While there are a few sexual scenes (where gender is almost interchangeable), it’s the day-to-day scenes of bathing and dressing that come across as the most erotic.

The Transformation is a story that deliberately alternates between present-tense and future-imperative, written as a direct address to the reader, as if we were the transformed character in question. As for the transformation, it’s actually handled quite beautifully . . . but with just the right amount of humour. Of course, given the perspective, we never get inside the head of Guy/Alcestis, so a lot of the transformation is left to our imagination. Actually, it’s so subtle that, at times, we simply have to trust that a transformation has taken place.

In addition to being deliberately vague, the story is also confusing to the point of being, at times, bewildering. It jumps between locations without warning, taking us from the home of Alcestis, to a carriage ride through the woods, to a Zeppelin airship, and to a gambling hall that seems to exist in two (or more) places at once. There’s also a sensation of jumping between time periods, from what we assume to be the early 20th century, to what seems to be the mid or late 19th century, to the era of WWII.

By the time the story reaches its climax, it is really left to the reader’s imagination to decide precisely who has been claimed, and how. It appears as if Guy is penetrated by Lord Peter in mid-transformation, taken as both a man and a woman, achieving the sexual satisfaction as both Guy and Alcestis that was foreshadowed from the start. Even after reading it a 3rd time, however, I’m not entirely sure.

Following that, we clearly find ourselves being addressed as Guy, at which time the story that comes full circle. The final paragraph is a clever reproduction of the first, only it addresses the future of Guy, rather than the present of Alcestis, suggesting that The Transformation is about to begin again, trapping them both in a perpetual dance of discovery.

Perhaps worth picking up as a curiosity, if you should stumble across a used copy somewhere, but I wouldn’t expend too much effort trying to find one.
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Flagged
bibrarybookslut | Jul 5, 2017 |
An account of a seven minute carwash...Meaningless, but would like to have known the cost....
 
Flagged
AlanPoulter | Jun 15, 2016 |

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Works
54
Also by
14
Members
890
Popularity
#28,791
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
5
ISBNs
81
Languages
1

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