Keith Douglas was almost certainly the greatest poet of the Second World War. He was killed in Normandy three days after D-Day. He was only twenty-four. His short life was one of contradictions: the gifted artist and romantic, always in love with the wrong girl also enjoyed soldiering and was quick to volunteer at the beginning of the war. The brave and resourceful tank commander with the Sherwood Rangers in the Western Desert, in the campaign of which his Alemein to Zem Zem is the classic account, was also an outspoken critic of the military establishment and often in trouble with his superiors. There was always another side to Keith Douglas: difficult, even arrogant, he was at the same time, as Desmond Graham, observes in his original preface, 'generous, sensitive to the difficulties of others, remorselessly honest, energetic, and passionately, innocently open.' Douglas made in his brief life some friends who never forgot him, and whose memories of him have contributed much to this book. For this biography, Desmond Graham had access to much private and unpublished material. From that, interviews, Keith Douglas' own poems, letters and drawings emerges a definitive biography. 'An almost unqualified success . . . Mr Graham has used his material with great skill and tact.' Roy Fuller 'It is difficult to imagine a better biography than this being written about Keith Douglas . . . Desmond Graham provides us with an astonishing amount of information.' Stephen Spender 'Extremely well-done . . It is written with authority and it will be standard.' Peter Levi 'Sumptuously evocative' John Carey
A collection of poems by World War II soldier Keith Douglas.
Keith Douglas, 1920-1944: A Biography
Poetry of the Second World War brings to light a neglected chapter in world literature.
A talent that did not outlast the war, killed in action in Normandy 1944, but his lasting legacy is contained in this exceptional book.
Simplify. me. when. I'm. Dead. Remember me when I am dead and simplify me when I'm dead. As the processes of earth strip off the colour and the skin take the brown hair and blue eye and leave me simpler than at birth when hairless I ...
84 Keyes, quoted in 'Memoir by Michael Meyer', in Collected Poems, 122. 85 Keyes to Milein Cosman, 25–6 May 1942, in Minos of Crete, 174. 86 Keyes, 'Elegy for Mrs Virginia Woolf', in Collected Poems, 18. 87 Keyes, 'Schiller Dying', ...
2001 Lectures. agree with Berlin that there are two concepts of liberty , one positive and the other negative , I do not ... what I am claiming in effect is that it consists of ' resilient non - interference ' .121 To speak of such ...
A Prose Miscellany
C. E. Montague, Disenchantment (New York: Brentano's, 1922), 124. ... Malcolm Smith, 'The War and British Culture', in Stephen Constantine, Maurice W. Kirby, and Mary B. Rose (eds), The First World War in British History (New York: ...
Dictionary Catalog of the Research Libraries of the New York Public Library, 1911-1971