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The Review - BOOKS
Published: 22 November 2007
 
Portrait of the poet as a young man

John Calder reviews a study of Ezra Pound’s early years and suggests that the madness that overcame him later in life may have been there from the beginning


THERE is no doubt that Ezra Pound was one of the most important poets of the... > more
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Books
The unhinged marksman
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Terribly house and garden at number 7b
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Rumpole and the Casanova casebook
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Within these walls
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A new inspector calls – in Ireland - EVEN by the standards of crime novels, Paul Charles’s latest offering, The Dust of Death, has a gruesome opening. A Donegal...>more

The tenderness of wolves
- INTERVIEWED Ted Hughes at length in 1965 in The Queens pub on the corner of Regent’s Park Road, Primrose Hill. It was just two years ...>more

Why poetry was shelved for publishing
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NOVELIST Dame Beryl Bainbridge has regrets that make you want to cry. She hates the way she treated her mother, Winnie...>more

Return of Rachel, 25 years on
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RACHEL Waring is one of the oddest characters to grace contemporary literature. But author Stephen Benatar, whose novel Wish Her ...>more

Whitehorn’s memories are a woman’s own
- THE title of Kath arine Whitehorn’s book comes from a quotation by Jim Fiebig, the American gemstone jeweller. And it ..>more

Death of honest politics?
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WHEN a young, highly talented and prolific political journalist falls seriously out of love with his favoured subject it must be cause for..>more

Has our great train network gone off track?
- CAPITALIST free market buccaneers of the 19th cen tury would have blushed at today’s “botched” free-for-all privatisation... > more

Dyspeptic observations from a tripper to the Hebrides - AN unusual product of the MacNeice centenary is the reissue, almost 70 years after its first publication... > more

After 40 years, we’re still on Radio 4’s wavelength - REVOLUTION and counter-revolution, baronial struggles, regional discontent, suicides and palace coups... > more

Freud for thought - MENTION Sigmund Freud and the image most of us have of the father of psychoanalysis is of a stern, serious-faced man with a beard, something... > more

A poet’s life after a loved one’s death - WHEN Dannie Abse lost his wife in a horrific car crash two years ago, the future looked bleak. > more

Home truths on wanderlust - Watch out for Michael Palin next time you are on Hampstead Heath. He won’t be jogging up Parliament Hill, as he used to do from his... > more

Stars and Stripes are flagging - IN common parlance, Eurasia is the land mass straddling Europe and Asia. > more

A dark history of crime in Soho - AUTHOR Paul Willetts’ biography of the Soho novelist and raconteur Julian Maclaren-Ross was many literary critics’ book of the year...>more

‘Demise of unions has set us back to 19th century’
- WORKERS of the world unite. You have nothing to lose but your bling (elaborate and highly ostentatious jewellery ...>more

‘Lady Macbeth Cherie,’ flirty first lady of Downing Street
- OVERSHADOWED by the massive publicity surrounding the launch of Alastair Campbell’s diaries of ...>more

Tribute to Heath-Stubbs - NINE months after the death of the blind poet John Heath-Stubbs, a host of celebrated poets will congregate in St James’s Church... > more

How the young Joe went from peasant to Lenin’s fixer - STALIN, like Hitler, was an outsider. Born December 17 1877 as Josef Vissarionovitch Djugushvili... > more

An alternative agenda for Brown? - I’M at last convinced that history marches backward.In the 1880s the future Conservative Prime Minister Disraeli wrote... > more

The Guantanamo allotment – a distraction from torture
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FOR a guy who has had razor blades taken to his penis for five months he retains a fantastic sense of ...>more

Women stay true to the ideals of the beautiful game
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EVER dreamed you played for England? I have: about 600 times. Let me tell you, it was exhausting. Every ...>more

Red hot object of desire
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Alan Bate' s Women in Love (1969) – a cinematic exercise, viewed by some as homo-eroticism, which still sexually disturbs...>more

Anger that lost its focus
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COLIN Wilson an nounced in his early teens that he was a genius and has consistently insisted that to be true. Nevertheless, the ...>more

Poor sell: organism that’s to die for
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MITOCHONDRIA are small components in our cells and there may be hundreds in each cell. Their function is to provide the ...>more

Poems for the child that lies within -
MIMI Khalvati was born in Tehran, grew up on the Isle of Wight, and trained at the Drama Centre in Kentish Town. She is a well-loved...>more

Jewel in the crown of the last White Rajah
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IT is not generally realised that the British Empire was at its greatest extent after the Second World War... > more

Heavy tread into virgin territory
- THIS is half a book, and a remarkable novella as such – one that examines in detail all the elements of love and lust on a honey moon ...>more

In search of strangers -
THE novelist Evelyn Waugh once created a fictional young woman prone to travel, who would send back cryptic postcards from exotic places. ...>more

Thoughts for the day on a brave bishop -
HERE are many paradoxes that lie unsolved in this insightful biography of Richard Harries, the recently retired ...>more

A half life lost inside the Shelley closed circle -
POOR Fanny Wollstonecraft. We don’t even know what she looked like; only the off-hand remarks... > more

Letters from a poet’s heart
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HE was small, modest, shy, the apologetic son of pathetically poor immigrants from Lithuania. The handful of books about... > more

Inside the mind of a lyrical iconoclast
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LEAVING Shakespeare out we must sometimes ask: “Who is the greatest English poet?” In considering... > more

It was the best of times and the worst of times
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CHRISTOPHER Barker is the son of the writer Elizabeth Smart and the notorious poet, George Barker... > more

The ‘celebrities’ who went back for more
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WHAT is it that makes people so brilliantly brave and oblivious of danger when their country is engulfed by war... > more

Sixty, and still single
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ON August 15, India will celebrate the 60th anniversary of independence from Britain. To the surprise and satisfaction... > more

One man’s comedy of terrors
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IS it journalism or stand-up? The political activist Mark Thomas’s show blurs the boundaries to great effect... > more

Step-by-step guide to making a movie
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MAKING a movie was once an elitist, prohibitively expensive activity that the average person could only dream of... > more

Republican Foot, the admirer of the Queen -
Vanessa, his terrier dog, regularly sat on the back seat of the chauffeur-driven car when Michael Foot left Whitehall... > more

Sir Sydney’s garden for the gardenless
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THE party was a knees-up fit for the newly crowned king. Scantily clad satyrs danced around a fountain that had... > more

John Major’s ‘slush puppy for the very rich’
- PRIME ministers and cooking prove to be a recipe for disaster in Peter Gladwin’s entertaining new cookery book... > more

Thatcher’s children - AS someone who was a member of all Margaret Thatcher’s Cabinets, I was naturally fascinated to read Simon Jenkins’ book. > more

A pictorial history of St Joan’s theatre workshop -
A BLEAK November day in 1953 in Stratford, east London, heralded a momentous day in the theatrical and... > more

Pick up a Penguin, or a Bob Dylan...
- PETER Stothard is the former editor of The Times and the current editor of the Times Literary Supplement. He is also on the... > more

Michael’s fantasy island for kids and grown-ups
- IT is perhaps not surprising to find one of our greatest children’s writers has shared his home with hundreds of... > more

The last of the fierce, individual history boys
- THE last time I saw him he was hurrying down Hampstead Road looking more than ever like the White Rabbit in the... > more

Funnyman Griff’s journey to his past
- IT is remarkable how objective history is, says Griff Rhys Jones. “It is an obvious point,” he says, “but one which really came... > more

The women who are far from veiled
- IF you believe what you read then you probably imagine Arab women are quiet victims of oppressive, hopelessly... > more

Who’s ever heard of Mr Virginia Woolf? - THE only time I met the famous art critic Kenneth Clark (Lord Clark of Civilisation), he told me that for him there were... > more

The twelve days which shook Victor’s world - HUNGARY and Hampstead play a vital role in the life of Victor Sebestyen. It was in Budapest that he was born... > more

The enigma that was Katharine Hepburn - WE were sitting in the Californian sunshine, Spencer Tracy and I, in orange canvas chairs outside a Bel-Air mansion... > more

Send in the clowns – but no elephants - ONCE upon a time there was a circus, which had no performing animals apart from a duck who would quack to the sound... > more

Romeo and Juliet who fled the Nazis in a boat - MICHAEL Arditti did not set out to write a parable. But his new novel A Sea Change is more than just a love story. > more

A true free spirit of the Middle East - BOMBS over Beirut, bullets across Baghdad: Abdelrahman Munif must be wailing in his grave. > more

Victorian masses and leisure principle - THE consumer society, says Judith Flanders, starts here. With the Great Exhibition of 1851. It was launched, to the... > more

The dutiful daughter of our greatest writer - SHE was the third child of ten, the second daughter of England’s greatest novelist and social campaigner... > more
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