The Waste Land and Other Poems (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) FROM OUR EDITORS
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
Considered the most important poem of the twentieth century, T. S.
Eliot’s The Waste Land is an oblique and fascinating
view of the hopelessness and confusion of purpose in modern Western
civilization. Published in 1922—the same year as Joyce’s
equally monumental Ulysses—The Waste Land is a series
of fragmentary dramatic monologues and cultural quotations that crossfade
into one another. Eliot believed that this style best represented the
fragmentation of society, and his poem portrays a sterile world of
panicky fears and barren lusts, and of human beings waiting for some sign
or promise of redemption. Mirroring the destruction and disillusionment
of World War I, The Waste Land had the effect of a bomb exploded
in a genteel drawing room, just as its author intended.
This volume also includes Prufrock and Other Observations (1917)
and Poems (1919). Prufrock contains the poem that first put Eliot
on the map, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” in which
the title character is tormented by the difficulty of articulating his
complex feelings. Among other masterpieces, Poems features
"Gerontion," a meditative interior monologue in blank verse—a poem
like none before it in the English language.
Randy Malamud is Professor of English and Associate Chair of the
department at Georgia State University. His specialty is modern
literature, and he has written three books and numerous articles about T.
S. Eliot.