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Dylan the Bard: A Life of Dylan Thomas

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Dylan The Bard interweaves Thomas''s life and work and death - his dream of Wales, the brawling and boozing in Fitzrovia in the 1930s and 1940s, and the American lecture tour that finally killed him in the early 1950s.'

256 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Andrew Sinclair

185 books32 followers
Andrew Sinclair was born in Oxford in 1935 and was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. After earning a Ph.D. in American History from Cambridge, he pursued an academic career in the United States and England. His first two novels, written while he was still at Cambridge, were both published in 1959: The Breaking of Bumbo (based on his own experience in the Coldstream Guards, and later adapted for a 1970 film written and directed by Sinclair) and My Friend Judas. Other early novels included The Project (1960), The Hallelujah Bum (1963), and The Raker (1964). The latter, also available from Valancourt, is a clever mix of Gothic fantasy and macabre comedy and was inspired by Sinclair’s relationship with Derek Lindsay, the pseudonymous author of the acclaimed novel The Rack (1958). Sinclair’s best-known novel, Gog (1967), a highly imaginative, picaresque account of the adventures of a seven-foot-tall man who washes ashore on the Scottish coast, naked and suffering from amnesia, has been named one of the top 100 modern fantasy novels. As the first in the ‘Albion Triptych’, it was followed by Magog (1972) and King Ludd (1988).

Sinclair’s varied and prolific career has also included work in film and a large output of nonfiction. As a director, he is best known for Under Milk Wood (1972), adapted from a Dylan Thomas play and starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. Sinclair’s nonfiction includes works on American history (including The Better Half: The Emancipation of the American Woman, which won the 1967 Somerset Maugham Award), books on Dylan Thomas, Jack London, Che Guevara, and Francis Bacon, and, more recently, works on the Knights Templar and the Freemasons.

Sinclair was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1972. He lives in London.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Nicky.
4,138 reviews1,119 followers
March 7, 2013
Mmm. Andrew Sinclair's biography of Dylan Thomas is colourful and interesting, certainly not dry, but half of the time Sinclair seemed to be delighting in his own prose, which got in the way of me actually retaining facts. He'd jump about, too, always foreshadowing the end of Dylan's career -- which makes sense, in one way, but which got in the way of what I really wanted to know about, Dylan the man. In the end I feel as though I have a blurry image, the public image of Dylan, and very little of the private man. Like his whole life was an act.
Profile Image for Caitlin Streit.
112 reviews
February 21, 2018
A fine work

I have read many a book on Dylan Thomas .this one by far is excellent.beautifully written it wraps you warmly in the poets work his tumultuous life and recounts his sad end. I highly recommend this read .
Profile Image for Mandy.
3,655 reviews337 followers
November 11, 2018
A thoroughly enjoyable, well-researched and compelling biography of Dylan Thomas. Written in a lively and accessible style with well-chosen extracts from the poet’s work, and demonstrating an affinity with and an understanding of the troubled and self-destructive poet.
Profile Image for Michael Bully.
345 reviews4 followers
November 23, 2016
Totally absorbing work , the author gets the balance between examining Dylan's poetry, setting in a wider literary context , with the ever increasing chaotic and dissolute life. The contrast between the poet's Swansea background set against the Fitzrovia pub circuit, London during the Blitz, and Thomas' work for the BBC during World War 2 , are all highlighted well.
Dylan's considerable talent is depicted well whilst the more unpleasant character traits are not romanticised in the least. His perpetual scrounging from friends and other contacts, his cynical attempt to become a Conscientious Objector before gaining an exemption, are detailed in this biography.
There are some superb passages in the biography
"His (Thomas) romantic revolt unleashed a certain coarseness and richness of language, a revelling in comedy and bawdy, an affirmation of the holy myths rather than a snivelling at God, and orgy of the irrational as opposed to the careful classification of what was meaningful or significant. ."
And
"These were the contradiction of the man who was the finest lyric poet of his age. He had one foot in Eden, the other in Babylon. He had one hand on the Bible, the other under the bedclothes. His heavy head was lifted to the sky, his feet were set on the bar-rail."
The section on Thomas and Welsh poetry is particularly fascinating. Interesting to see that Welsh nationalists felt, perhaps with some justification, that Dylan Thomas neglected the Welsh language.It would have been good to develop this line further, Dylan is portrayed as feeling no obligation to political causes , though showed great commitment to his own art, even destroying some of his poetry during World War 2. This detachment adds to the artistic strength of his work.
Profile Image for Candace .
312 reviews46 followers
November 25, 2015
I selected this book because I love reading books about writers, not because of any affinity for Dylan Thomas. However, I am very glad that I read it. It was an enjoyable and easy read. I am familiar with U.S. History, but I very much enjoyed Sinclair's history of the poet and of Dylan Thomas. I was unfamiliar with a lot of this material. I also enjoyed how so much of Thomas' poetry is included throughout the book and we see how an artist was inspired to write that poetry by the people around him and the things that were occurring around him. Very enjoyable.

This galley was provided to me by NetGalley and the Publisher in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Eileen Hall.
1,073 reviews
November 11, 2015
This is a brilliant biography of Dylan Thomas!
His drinking and carousing is well documented and his death in America poignant.
A great read!
I was given a digital copy of this book by the publisher via Netgalley in return for an honest unbiased review.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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