book data
3,555 ratings,
4.33
average rating, 226 reviews
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published
October 12th 2003
(first published 1960)
by Barnes & Noble Classics
binding
Paperback, 361 pages
isbn
1593080506
(isbn13: 9781593080501)
description
Born in Amherst, Massachusetts in 1830, Dickinson began life as an energetic, outgoing young woman who excelled as a student. However, in her mid-twen...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4,500)
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avg 4.33
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Because she is so freaking good--
As good--as she can be--
She makes me want--to scream--and shout--
And set my poor heart free--
Because I cannot live without--
Her rhythm--and her rhyme--
I keep this poet close at hand
And only ask--for time.
As good--as she can be--
She makes me want--to scream--and shout--
And set my poor heart free--
Because I cannot live without--
Her rhythm--and her rhyme--
I keep this poet close at hand
And only ask--for time.
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Well I did not read every one of the 25,678 but certainly a fair number. You know when she died they found she'd stuffed poems everywhere in her house, up the chimney, down her knickers, tied in little "packets" onto her dogs' hindquarters, someone cut a slice of a loaf of bread to make a sandwich and another 25 poems fell out, I think Emily would have made a great drug mule if she'd have lived another 120 years. Although she may have found a serious conflict between her intense religi...more
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Read in September, 1998
recommends it for:
all women and poetry readers
Emily Dickinson's poems convinced me, at an early age of 9 or 10, to become a writer myself. I discovered her poems from the obsolete American textbooks my mother got from the collection in our school library. On Saturday and Sunday afternoons, when it was too hot to play outside and children were forced to take afternoon siestas, I'd end up reading her poems and imagined the person, that woman, with whom I shared similar thoughts. My favorite poem remains to this day:
I'm nobody! Who...more
I'm nobody! Who...more
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Read in April, 2003
My last semester of college I had to take one class from a list of four or five, and the one that fit into my schedule was called "Structure of Verse." Without bothering to find out anything more about the class, I registered. I didn't have a chance to buy the book before the first day, so I didn't find out until midway through the first class meeting that the class was actually called "Structure of Verse: the Poems of Emily Dickinson."
Emily Dickinson had long bee...more
Emily Dickinson had long bee...more
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"MUCH madness is divinest sense
To a discerning eye;
Much sense the starkest madness.
'T is the majority
In this, as all, prevails.
Assent, and you are sane;
Demur, - you're straightway dangerous,
And handled with a chain."
A perfect collection for a perfect poet. Poems small in length but gigantic in impact. For a classic example look above. Some argue it is about John Brown, written shortly after his execution, an interpretation...more
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Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
Poetry lovers
I would highly, highly recommend strolling through Dickinson's collected verse. She's a (surprisingly) highly underrated poet. Going deep into her entire collection will unearth unknown gems as well as old favorites. This edition, organized chronologically, allows the opportunity to study her growth as a poet and explore her obsessions over time. It also provides the date of first publication (if there was one). A must-have for any poetry enthusiast, highly recommended for those who have a modes...more
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recommends it for:
everyone
This book was a birthday present -- a few birthdays ago now -- from Ryan Hickerson. It's one of the best birthday presents I've ever received. It will probably be under "currently-reading" forever because it's the kind of book I pick through and thumb through and browse through, sometimes systematically, sometimes not, and the poems are always new each time. That's partially because I have a terrible memory, and partially because I age and they change for me, and partially because the ...more
Read in April, 2008
Life is death we’re lengthy at,
Death the hinge of life.
This is the entire text of poem #502 in this edition, an edition gleaned from the editor’s three volume 2,500 sources variorum set of 1998. Dickinson’s poems are characteristically pithy and short, with idiosyncratic punctuation and grammar. Few were published in her lifetime. And due to the editorial changes made in them, she was very unhappy in those that were. American literature owes a great debt to her younger si...more
Death the hinge of life.
This is the entire text of poem #502 in this edition, an edition gleaned from the editor’s three volume 2,500 sources variorum set of 1998. Dickinson’s poems are characteristically pithy and short, with idiosyncratic punctuation and grammar. Few were published in her lifetime. And due to the editorial changes made in them, she was very unhappy in those that were. American literature owes a great debt to her younger si...more
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I love Dickinson. More specifically, I love the sense of balance I feel when reading any of her poems. Her poetry has light within its overwhelming darkness; it is straightforward yet subtle. Its originality is sometimes even startling. I have learned so much in reading her work but the most powerful of lessons I take from Dickinson is to "Tell all the truth but tell it slant... The Truth must dazzle gradually/ Or every man be blind."
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Read in July, 2009
Emily Dickinson articulates my own thoughts and feelings in a way I never could. She manifests my ideal. She validates my existence. If you like Emily, I like you.
I hide myself within my flower,
That wearing on your breast,
You, unsuspecting, wear me too—
And angels know the rest.
I hide myself within my flower,
That, fading from your vase,
You, unsuspecting, feel for me
Almost a loneliness.
I hide myself within my flower,
That wearing on your breast,
You, unsuspecting, wear me too—
And angels know the rest.
I hide myself within my flower,
That, fading from your vase,
You, unsuspecting, feel for me
Almost a loneliness.
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Read in October, 2008
What can I say? Emily Dickinson's poetry is the most stunning, haunting poetry I've ever read. I'd read just a few of her poems before decidin to tackle her complete works. It's an incredible experience to read poem after poem that almost makes you feel like she understood the emotions of mortality better than anyone alive. And how she could convey that with words ... wow.
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Read in January, 1988
I enjoy her terse style of poetry. She crams a lot of meaning into a few words.
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Emily is my favorite 19th century American poet. When I first discovered her I connected not only with her words (which I didn't always get) but also the intelligent, cloistered woman whose mind could not be contained within the simple life she led...so much like myself.
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At her best, ED combines a tight form with words that should trouble us, about the limits of knowing and about the terror of death, which are sometimes one and the same. Along with Whitman, the first great (because the first realistic) American poet.
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i've been reading these for years. there have always been a few that took me by surprise, but lately i find this whole collection to be a really astonishing experiment in language - it's taken me years to see how modern she is (for you dickinson fans, i'm sure you're saying, well, DUH!). i say this because her work really is a kind of minimalism. she seems to to have more patience than most poets. she waits until the perfect formation of sounds and meanings emerge in just the right crystalline f...more
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Best Poem Titled: Since I could not stop for death.
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Update: I've gotten now to the older ED. At this point, she's dryer, less intense. Two-word abstractions fill entire lines. You get the sense of a life lived among a paucity of objects, in which each object gradually assumes nearly allegorical significance.
I'm also thinking that ED is a fantasist. She writes something that she wants to read in order to stoke a certain fantasy of hers--a fantasy of unique suffering, of delayed reward. It isn't a fantasy that appeals to me (putting anything ...more
I'm also thinking that ED is a fantasist. She writes something that she wants to read in order to stoke a certain fantasy of hers--a fantasy of unique suffering, of delayed reward. It isn't a fantasy that appeals to me (putting anything ...more
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5 comments
Has a copy to sell/swap
recommends it for:
Dickinson fans and poetry collectors
Note: Currently, several very different editions of Dickinson's complete poems are combined on Goodreads. I am reviewing the Johnson and Franklin versions only.
No Dickinson appreciator should be without the 1960 Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson edited by Thomas H. Johnson. The 1775 poems are numbered, dated, and indexed by subject and first line. Serious readers should consider investing in some Post-It page markers.
R. W. Franklin's 1998 Poems of Emily Dickinson: Rea...more
No Dickinson appreciator should be without the 1960 Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson edited by Thomas H. Johnson. The 1775 poems are numbered, dated, and indexed by subject and first line. Serious readers should consider investing in some Post-It page markers.
R. W. Franklin's 1998 Poems of Emily Dickinson: Rea...more
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Everyone knows that Emily Dickinson was a great poet, but it takes a reading of her collected poems to understand just how staggeringly great she was. Usually represented, in course syllabi and anthologies, by a handful of brilliant but overfamiliar lyrics ("Because I could not stop for Death," "I heard a Fly buzz - when I died," etc.), she in fact wrote hundreds of poems of comparable greatness--most of them within the span of just three or four years. The English language i...more
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Read in January, 2000
With a few short lines, Emily Dickinson can mesmerize anyone. Her poetry covered every stage of life - from hope to despair, success to failure, birth to death: all expressed in short, poignant verses. She may have been odd, judged by the standards of her day, maybe even by today's standards, but the words she put to paper will guarantee her place in the world's great poets.
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quotes from this book
"Those who have not found the heaven below,
will fail of it above."
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