The Ode Less Travelled: Unlocking the Poet Within
by Stephen Fry
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 238)
bookshelves:
biting-wit,
humor,
oh-so-british,
poetry
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for:
English nerds
The only -- and I do mean the only -- negative thing I can say about this book is that Stephen Fry has taken the run-on sentence to pathological levels. The occasional grammatical slip-up hardly warrants notice, but I swear that throughout all 327 pages of this book, there was at least one run-on sentence per page. Someone (preferably his editor?) needs to pull him aside and introduce him to semi-colons.
Other than that editing issue, this book was buckets of fun and superbly useful ...more
Other than that editing issue, this book was buckets of fun and superbly useful ...more
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recommends it for:
English majors, Anglophiles, Fry and Laurie fans,
The ONLY reason I didn't give this 5 stars is the fact that I would really love to have this book with an audiobook cd attached, read by Stephen Fry himself. It was so easy to get through when you can imagine his voice reading the words but I kept losing that voice and thus losing my ability to keep up with what I was reading. It makes so much more sense when you "hear" him reading it, and doesn't seem so dry then. If you know his voice, then you probably know what I mean.
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Read in March, 2007
recommends it for:
poets and non-poets
I might be biased because of my deep and long-standing affection for Mr. Fry, but this is exactly the poetry book I needed-- it gives you nuts and bolts, form and stress and history, and he doesn't shy away from using the proper terminology. And the potshots he takes at free verse are wonderful -- particularly once he demonstrates that a lot of poetry one thinks of as formless is deeply rooted in standard poetic traditions.
Definitely worth a look.
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bookshelves:
didnt-finish
Read in April, 2007
recommends it for:
people who want to write poetry the old-fashioned way
This was actually very interesting, but unless you're actually going to write poetry, there's not much point in just reading it through for pleasure.
If I was at a point in my life where I needed things to occupy my time, this would be a great course in how to write (traditional) poetry, but I have way too many other things I'd rather be doing right now, frankly.
Still, his examples are hilarious as you might expect from Fry.
If I was at a point in my life where I needed things to occupy my time, this would be a great course in how to write (traditional) poetry, but I have way too many other things I'd rather be doing right now, frankly.
Still, his examples are hilarious as you might expect from Fry.
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Read in March, 2008
The best way to appreciate poetry, Stephen Fry maintains, is to attempt to write it. So he takes us on a quick trip through the different technical elements of poetry and has us write iambic pentameter then build up to full forms. It's fun, light-hearted, entertaining, but still substantial. Not at all patronizing, not at all difficult. High school (and even Primary!) English should have been like this.
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Read in March, 2008
If I had read this brilliant, encyclopedic, unbelieveably funny and readable compendium of poetry and poetic form BEFORE I'd written Hey There, Stink Bug! I could have saved myself many hours of confusing, conflicting and sometimes dreary research! And so, I did the book backwards, so to speak: the exercises first, and then the reading.
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currently-reading
This is 'Writing Poetry for Dummies' -- well, not dummies, but intelligent people who are ignorant of prosody. Which I'm not, but it's still a fun read. Warning -- contains exercises. Further warning -- Fry is somewhat biased towards traditional form.
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While I would normally flee from any book containing the phrase "the poet within", I love Stephen Fry and I often wish I could write poetry.
Update: Too much other writing to do to fit in the poetry experiment. Maybe this summer!
Update: Too much other writing to do to fit in the poetry experiment. Maybe this summer!
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Read in December, 2006
Brilliant stuff. The sort of book that will change your life in largely annoying ways - you'll forever be wondering if "Brilliant stuff" is trochaic or amphimaceric and for the most part you'll be getting it wrong.
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I love Fry and when I discovered this at B&N on Sunday, I knew it was for me. My poetry has always been my dark secret. I know there are other poets lurking out there, too.
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Read in April, 2008
Who'd have thought Stephen Fry knew so much about poetry? Really informative and also entertaining.
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Read in April, 2008
I am reading it now and am learning a great deal. I love his manner- he's perfect for me.
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bookshelves:
poetry
Read in July, 2006
recommends it for:
To Learn to Write and Understand Poetry
Given me new hope that maybe I will someday write a worthy poem or two.
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