icon
icon
icon
icon
Book Info
left icon
setting icon
The Waste Land (Liveright Classics) book image
Poetry

The Waste Land (Liveright Classics)

By T. S. Eliot

book iconW. W. Norton & Company

Description

The first edition of T. S. Eliot’s masterpiece reappears with a major introduction by Pulitzer Prize–winner Paul Muldoon.

The Waste Land is arguably the most important poem of the twentieth century. First published in the United States by Boni & Liveright in 1922, this landmark reissue of the first edition, now back with its original publisher, includes a new introduction by Paul Muldoon, showcasing the poem's searing power and strange, jarring beauty. With a modernist design that matches the original, this edition allows contemporary readers to experience the poem the way readers would have seen it for the first time.

As Muldoon writes, "It's almost impossible to think of a world in which The Waste Land did not exist. So profound has its influence been not only on twentieth-century poetry but on how we’ve come to view the century as a whole, the poem itself risks being taken for granted." Famously elliptical, wildly allusive, at once transcendent and bleak, The Waste Land defined modernity after the First World War, forever transforming our understanding of ourselves, the broken world we live in, and the literature that was meant to make sense of it. In a voice that is arch, ironic, almost ebullient, and yet world-weary and tragic, T. S. Eliot mixes and remixes, drawing on a cast of ghosts to create a new literature for a new world. In the words of Edmund Wilson, "Eliot…is one of our only authentic poets…[The Waste Land is] one triumph after another."

Summary by AI

The summary has not been generated yet.

Readers

poesia libéluca
1

Reviews

Notes

close icon
Sign In
close icon
Select Languages

Which languages of books would you like to see on the main feed?

All Languages
English
Español
Français
Português
हिन्दी
العربية
中文
日本語
한국어
close icon
Share Links
close icon
Share Review
close icon
Comments
No comments yet