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493 ratings, 4.31 average rating, 48 reviews
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published
June 1971
(first published 1952)
by New Directions Publishing Corporation
binding
Paperback, 203 pages
url
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isbn
0811202054
(isbn13: 9780811202053)
description
Dylan Thomas's poems gambol & frisk across the tongue & imagination like those of few poets. His choicely crafted (often synaesthetic) phrase...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 649)
bookshelves:
poetic-rapture,
top-shelf,
worldly-lit
Just a master of sheer language.
His poetry works on your inner consciousness, you feel it and hear it before you think it.
Untangling his syntax and his associations makes for some interesting reading all its own.
His name meant "wave", as in the ocean, in Welsh.
He said his three biggest influences were Yeats (I think), The Bible, and Freud.
Imagine this simmering stew, this cauldron if you will, and you've got yourself something rich, evocative, stormy, and powerf...more
Read in April, 1997
Just a master of sheer language.
His poetry works on your inner consciousness, you feel it and hear it before you think it.
Untangling his syntax and his associations makes for some interesting reading all its own.
His name meant "wave", as in the ocean, in Welsh.
He said his three biggest influences were Yeats (I think), The Bible, and Freud.
Imagine this simmering stew, this cauldron if you will, and you've got yourself something rich, evocative, stormy, and powerf...more
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Read in January, 1994
What can I say? Still my all-time favorite. Maddeningly dense and self-absorbed in places, but always a master of language and sound. The closer you look, the more you see just how carefully constructed the poems are, and how he pulls off complicated structures with disarming ease. Just hearing the poems out loud is a transcendent experience, and many of the best are available online in his voice.
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vampran
This collection has the great poems “Fern Hill” and “Light Breaks Where No Sun Shines”. This collection also holds one of my personal favorite poems of all times, the simple yet majestic “I Have Longed To Move Away”. This book is a great introduction to Thomas’s work.
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bookshelves:
literature
recommends it for: English speakers
Read in December, 1971
recommended to erik by:
Richard Hyderecommends it for: English speakers
Cannabis was so prevalent by the end of high school and beginning of college, my need to belong so great, that I was a regular user on weekends. Eventually, however, having explored the action of the drug to the extent of taking enough hashish as to be unable to move, absorbed in drifting over brilliant kaleidoscopically checkered fields, I recognized that I wasn't learning anything new. Marihuana made me silly, made me hungry, made me sleepy, left me with a hangover the next day, a mild stupo...more
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Read in January, 2008
I have, for a long time, enjoyed listening to his recorded readings. Each time I listen to him, I know a lustier poet could not exist. His lust for experience—for the "Light (that) breaks where no sun shines" or the "rub of love"—comes across in the verve contained in his choice words and in the mechanism of his voice. Thomas owned the unusual gift of Being, within himself and within the pulse of other living things that would later become the inspiration for his work... ...more
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Read in January, 1996
recommends it for:
anyone who thinks poetry sucks
OK, I admit it. I bought this after I heard "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night" at a young man's funeral. I did not know at the time that it's a funeral cliche. The guy who read it didn't exactly read it. He screamed and cried it in grief and rage. I was more moved than I'd ever been by a poem. I told a college friend about it, and he said, "uh, isn't that the poem Rodney Dangerfield recites in 'Back To School?'" In horror, I realized he was right. So he kinda rui...more
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Read in January, 2008
I'm a confessed poetry junky...
This collection had most of the standard poems you'd expect with a few interestings exceptions. Interesting because Thomas compiled this list himself and addressed the collection to his readers "The strangers." I enjoyed reading a few I either hadn't read before or that often and wondering what it was about a particular poem that made Thomas want it included. I was pleased that, just like the poems I'm more familiar with, most of these others hold ...more
This collection had most of the standard poems you'd expect with a few interestings exceptions. Interesting because Thomas compiled this list himself and addressed the collection to his readers "The strangers." I enjoyed reading a few I either hadn't read before or that often and wondering what it was about a particular poem that made Thomas want it included. I was pleased that, just like the poems I'm more familiar with, most of these others hold ...more
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I'm currently in the midst of re-reading my poems of Dylan Thomas book, given to me by my best friend Jacqui in VA in 1986...I obviously had no idea what I was reading, I just knew he was important. I actually think I understand him now less, thanks to my scientific training, if that makes sense. But I love the lyrical flow of his words and the imagery, even if I can't exactly interpret each work. Good night-time browsing before bed fodder.
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I have loved many of these verses since adolescence. They have contributed many phrases to my everyday conversation, to the occasional puzzlement of hearers. "Famous among the barns," Mr. Thomas says, ironically referring to the "fame" we imagine we have among our close associates - few of whom ever give us a thought or would be distressed if we should softly and suddenly vanish away.
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neverfinishedbutwantto,
poetry,
reference,
to-read
Another poetry book I've not read cover-to-cover but have mined extensively. Thomas' poetry is so syllabic (to quote him) and so full of blarney and drunken verbosity that one can get bogged down with the quest for meaning. I prefer to read this as nearly incomprehensible hymns to living and nature that effect something powerful in the words and lines.
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The power of Thomas's language is undeniable. Sentences like "Time held me green and dying/ Though I sang in my chains like the sea" still linger in my mind. This collection is particularly good since Thomas himself selected them a year before his death. So get the book, go to the White Horse Bar and lift a pint in tribute to this great poet.
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Read in January, 1967
recommends it for:
everyone
When I graduated from high school, the only gift I received from my parents was a copy of this book. It sat on my bookshelf for many years, until someone stole it. I am still mad about it, because the poems are classics, and if you only have room for one volume of Dylan Thomas' poetry on your bookshelf, this should be the one.
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Amazing work. Dylan Thomas's imagery gives me goosebumps. He once described his method as a sequential establishment and interplay of images, letting the images do the work of his poetry, each image changing each prior image and the entire work thus evolves as you read, his lines like the chapters in a play.
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I've been reading Dylan Thomas' poetry since I was a teenager - many years ago - and still after all these years I come back to it again and again. The richness, the of his language, the sheer joy of words and the way they're not only written but spoken - they strike a deep and resonating note.
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perhaps not suited for those of you completely turned away from faith based writing, destiny, love, religion, God etc in media and literature....this collection if nothing else provides the kind of temptation that no evengelism can touch.
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recommends it for:
poetry lovers english lovers
The reason I fell in love with poetry. His imagery and the power and flow of his words humble me. Recordings of his poetry readings with that baritone and welsh accent are awe inspiring - a bard for all ages.
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I so loved Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night that I wanted to love Dylan Thomas more, and I tackled the collected poems, but he just doesn't rank up there for me with my other favorite poets.
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
Poetry lovers
This isn't the exact book i've got, mine is Poems (everyman poetry) by Dylan Thomas and Walford Davies and this is a great book. I love the poem 'Do not go gentle into that good night' in particular.
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Read in March, 2001
"Fern Hill" is one of the most beautiful poems in twentieth century literature. And everything else in Thomas' compressed, darkly exuberant oeuvre is pretty amazing too.
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recommends it for:
Poetry fans.
He didn't go gentle into that good night, but he went too soon. It always amazes me that such a troubled person could make brilliant sense of his life on paper.
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poetry
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