Description
About the Author
James Williams is a Lecturer in English Literature at the University of York. He is the co-editor, with Matthew Bevis, of Edward Lear and the Play of Poetry (OUP, 2016) and, with Anna Barton, of the forthcoming Edinburgh Companion to Nonsense. His publications include essays on Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, Alfred Tennyson, Samuel Beckett, and Victorian comic verse, as well as the introduction and historical notes to Alice Goodman, History is Our Mother: Three Libretti (NYRB, 2017).
Reviews
'A treat - scholarly, incisive and moving, with brilliantly surprising readings of Lear's work'.
Jenny Uglow, author of Mr Lear: A Life of Art and Nonsense
'A wonderfully engaging and revealing book, one that talks a great deal of sense about nonsense (without talking too much sense). The imaginative incisiveness of Williams's reading - and the deftness of his writing - make this the best study of Lear's poetry we have.'
Matthew Bevis, University of Oxford
'This is a study whose significance for the field belies its physical size, standing not only as the best account of Lear's poetry yet published, but as a work which ought to reorient our sense of Lear's place in the history of nineteenth-century poetry. [...] Williams's patient explication of the truth it speaks about both sense and nonsense should be regarded as a foundational articulation of Lear's poetic achievement.'
Benjamin Westwood, The Review of English Studies
Book Information
ISBN 9780746312216
Author James Williams
Format Hardback
Page Count 200
Imprint Liverpool University Press
Publisher Liverpool University Press