Early Auden
by Edward Mendelson
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Early Auden remains the most penetrating, detailed, and informative examination we have of the great work produced by the young W. H. Auden in EngLand before the war. Edward Mendelson writes with unrivaled knowledge of published texts, manuscripts, private papers, and essays in this most illuminating of critical works.Tags
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To be frank, I am not very interested in Auden's poetry, but I am interested in the man, and although I also have the Auden biography by Humphrey Carpenter, I bought this book as it seems to contain so much biographical information.
I am also more interested in the young Auden than the early Auden, and of course the group of friends at the time of their budding friendship. It was entirely serendipitous that I was reading Christopher Isherwood's Lions & Shadows. An education in the Twenties, which is also mentioned, at almost the same time. As these two books cover about the same periods, the Twenties.
Edward Mendelson's Early Auden cover the period up to 1938, which biographically is the most interesting period and covers some of his show more travels to China and their stay in Germany, where he watched the rise of fascism. This period between schooling and the outbreak of the war is also the period of discovering his homosexuality and the development of life-long friendships with Isherwood and other writers and thinkers of the period.
Mendelson gives in-depth psychological explanations for the development and maturing of Auden's poetry, with many excerpts to illustrate. The book can be read as a biography of the young Auden, with a lot of attention given to his poetry.
Very well-written and very well done. show less
I am also more interested in the young Auden than the early Auden, and of course the group of friends at the time of their budding friendship. It was entirely serendipitous that I was reading Christopher Isherwood's Lions & Shadows. An education in the Twenties, which is also mentioned, at almost the same time. As these two books cover about the same periods, the Twenties.
Edward Mendelson's Early Auden cover the period up to 1938, which biographically is the most interesting period and covers some of his show more travels to China and their stay in Germany, where he watched the rise of fascism. This period between schooling and the outbreak of the war is also the period of discovering his homosexuality and the development of life-long friendships with Isherwood and other writers and thinkers of the period.
Mendelson gives in-depth psychological explanations for the development and maturing of Auden's poetry, with many excerpts to illustrate. The book can be read as a biography of the young Auden, with a lot of attention given to his poetry.
Very well-written and very well done. show less
Much more treatment of the plays than I would have liked, but still seems to be an indispensable work. I don’t consider it to be biography—there’s probably less biography here than even the typical book-length, single-author literary criticism supplies.
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Edward Mendelson is the literary executor of the Estate of W. H. Auden, and the Lionel Trilling Professor in the Humanities at Columbia University. His books include Moral Agents, The Things That Matter, and Lives of the New York Intellectuals.
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Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1981
- People/Characters
- W. H. Auden
- Original language
- English
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- 137
- Popularity
- 237,999
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (4.29)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 5




























































