Wolverine Books
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » "This Book of Starres": Learning to Read George Herbert  
Categories
Books
DVDs
Music
Magazines
VHS
Food
Jewelry
Apparel
Sporting Goods
Outdoor
New Releases
Doveglion: Collected Poems (Penguin Classics)
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: A New Verse Translation
Tyrannosaurus Rex Versus the Corduroy Kid
William Wordsworth - The Major Works: including The Prelude (Oxford World's Classics)
Selected Poetry (Oxford World's Classics)
Domestic Violence: Poems
Pushkin's Lyric Intelligence
Yeats and Joyce: Cyclical History and the Reprobate Tradition
The First Poems in English (Penguin Classics)
The Life Of John Keats
Bestsellers
Beowulf: A New Verse Translation (Bilingual Edition)
The Canterbury Tales (Penguin Classics)
Beowulf (Dover Thrift Editions)
The Norton Anthology of Poetry
Paradise Lost (Penguin Classics)
The Waste Land (Norton Critical Editions)
The Canterbury Tales (Bantam Classics)
The Collected Poems of W.B. Yeats
The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, Sir Orfeo

BlogRoll

Travel With Books

"This Book of Starres": Learning to Read George Herbert

Author: James Boyd White
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Category: Book

List Price: $40.00
Buy New: $30.40
You Save: $9.60 (24%)



New (3) Used (6) from $13.43

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 2182595

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 320
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6 x 0.8

ISBN: 0472083376
Dewey Decimal Number: 811
EAN: 9780472083374
ASIN: 0472083376

Publication Date: November 1, 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"A real pleasure. . . . Reading this book was like revisiting a country I thought I knew well with a guide who could show me all kinds of delights I had missed in my previous sojourns. . . . A terrific, engaging book." --Michael Schoenfeldt, author of Prayer and Power: George Herbert and Renaissance Courtship
"This Book of Starres" is one of those all-too-rare books in which an author's love of someone's work--in this case, the seventeenth-century English poet George Herbert--leads to a journey of exploration.
Herbert's poetry presents a special set of challenges: It is to the modern ear archaic, difficult in thought and structure, and entirely theological in character. Yet no poet is more deeply admired by those who know him well. "This Book of Starres" is meant to engage the reader in a process of reading by which this verse can be seen to be vivid and alive. It is the record of one person's life-changing involvement with the poetry of George Herbert; in this it is about not only how, but why we read great poetry.
"It is a joy to experience Herbert's poetry in the company of James Boyd White, whose affinity for the work is always convincing and seems at times preternatural. 'This Book of Starres' is a necessary pleasure: all readers of poetry, whether expert or inexpert, will find it enriching." --Alice Fulton
". . . both a delight to read, and one of the most instructive exercises in literature and theology I have read for a long time. . . . Herbert emerges as one of the greatest, a writer to test and change the imagination, the very way in which we think about the world and that which is beyond it." --Literature and Theology
James Boyd White is Hart Wright Professor of Law, Professor of English, and Adjunct Professor of Classical Studies, University of Michigan.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars updating after a few years (and a different state!)   March 16, 2007
White is an perceptive reader of poetry and theological reflections who has his own idiosyncratic but highly accesible style; all at the service of making George Herbert's poetry shine more brightly for others...not at all to stand in the spotlight himself. The "self-consuming artifacts" that Herbert constructs to effectively communicate religious truth and human uncertainty are well represented by White's own writing style, a steady candleflame that slowly and inobtrusively fades into the brighter dawn of Herbert's meditations rising into the reader's consciousness. I would recommend this book equally strongly for someone who has never heard of Herbert, or for a long-time lover of his poems and essays. (2007 note - but you'll have to look around for a used copy now, sad to say!)


5 out of 5 stars An illumination for some, a deeper delving for others   February 28, 1999
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

White is an perceptive reader of poetry and theological reflections who has his own idiosyncratic but highly accesible style; all at the service of making George Herbert's poetry shine more brightly for others...not at all to stand in the spotlight himself. The "self-consuming artifacts" that Herbert constructs to effectively communicate religious truth and human uncertainty are well represented by White's own writing style, a steady candleflame that slowly and inobtrusively fades into the brighter dawn of Herbert's meditations rising into the reader's consciousness. I would recommend this book equally strongly for someone who has never heard of Herbert, or for a long-time lover of his poems and essays.

Powered by Associate-O-Matic

Contact Wolverine Books