"Draws pleasingly together canonical texts and works by under-analyzed modernist authors, offering for the first time a focused account of this form of post-war writing . This book will be useful to scholars in First World War and modernist studies, and the well-defined and effectively developed central concepts of the long poem and homorhyme might also be used profitably in other contexts." -- The Review of English Studies "Oliver Tearle has done a good and timely job on bringing his reader back into the micro-climate of the poetry produced at the time by some of the twentieth century giants such as TS Eliot and Ezra Pound and their lesser known (today) contemporaries, including Ford Madox Ford ( Antwerp , 1915), Hope Mirrlees ( Paris: A Poem , 1920), Richard Aldington, ( A Fool I' the Forest: A Phantasmagoria (1925) - from As You Like It : "A fool, a fool! I met a fool i' the forest, / A motley fool; a miserable world!") and Nancy Cunard, ( Parallax , 1925)." -- Dublin Review of Books "In this engaging, learned study, Oliver Tearle takes for his subject what he calls a "miniature genre-within-a-genre," the modernist long poem, and he seeks to explore the relation of this genre to the Great War.His book provides an excellent introduction to all six poems. If at first this seems most valuable when it comes to Paris, A Fool i' the Forest, and Parallax, the whole is yet greater than the parts, for the book offers a rich and compelling picture of modernist poetry in the decade after the Great War." -- Affirmations of the Modern.
The Great War, the Waste Land and the Modernist Long Poem