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Neruda : the poet's calling / Mark Eisner.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Ecco, An imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, [2018]Edition: First editionDescription: vi, 628 pages, 16 pages of unnumbered plates : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780062694201
  • 0062694200
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 861/.62 B 23
Contents:
To Temuco -- Where the rain was born -- Awkward adolescence -- The young poet -- Bohemian twilights -- Desperate songs -- Dead gallop -- Afar -- Opium and marriage -- An interlude -- Spain in the heart -- Birth and destruction -- I picked a road -- América -- Senator Neruda -- The flight -- Exile and Matilde -- Matilde and Stalin -- Fully empowered -- Triumph, destruction, death -- The flowers that sleep.
Summary: "The most definitive biography to date of the poet Pablo Neruda, a moving portrait of one of the most intriguing and influential figures in Latin American history"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Bedford Public Library Biography Biography BIO NERUDA EIS Available 32500001749465
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A Finalist for the PEN/Bograd Weld Prize for Biography

The most definitive biography to date of the poet Pablo Neruda, a moving portrait of one of the most intriguing and influential figures in Latin American history

Few poets have captured the global imagination like Pablo Neruda. In his native Chile, across Latin America, and in many other parts of the world, his name and legacy have become almost synonymous with liberation movements, and with the language of erotic love.

Neruda: The Poet's Calling is the product of fifteen years of research by Mark Eisner, writer, translator, and documentary filmmaker. The book vividly depicts Neruda's monumental life, potent verse, and ardent belief in the "poet's obligation" to use poetry for social good. It braids together three major strands of Neruda's life--his world-revered poetry; his political engagement; and his tumultuous, even controversial, personal life--forming a single cohesive narrative of intimacy and breadth.

The fascinating events of Neruda's life are interspersed with Eisner's thoughtful examinations of the poems, both as works of art in their own right and as mirrors of Neruda's life and times. The result is a book that animates Neruda's riveting story in a new way--one that offers a compelling narrative version of Neruda's life and work, undergirded by exhaustive research, yet designed to bring this colossal literary figure to a broader audience.

Includes bibliographical references (pages [527]-603) and index.

"The most definitive biography to date of the poet Pablo Neruda, a moving portrait of one of the most intriguing and influential figures in Latin American history"-- Provided by publisher.

To Temuco -- Where the rain was born -- Awkward adolescence -- The young poet -- Bohemian twilights -- Desperate songs -- Dead gallop -- Afar -- Opium and marriage -- An interlude -- Spain in the heart -- Birth and destruction -- I picked a road -- América -- Senator Neruda -- The flight -- Exile and Matilde -- Matilde and Stalin -- Fully empowered -- Triumph, destruction, death -- The flowers that sleep.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Pablo Neruda (1904-73) received the 1971 Nobel Prize "for a poetry that with the action of an elemental force brings alive a continent's destiny and dreams," to quote the Nobel Committee. Now Eisner (editor, The Essential Neruda: Selected Poems) brings alive Latin America's greatest poet. Sensitive analysis and vibrant storytelling infuse the hundreds of pages forming this second major biography of Neruda published in English (the first, by Adam Feinstein, came out in 2004). Neruda was a Chilean diplomat and left-wing activist whose poems pulse with amorous passion and radical politics. His whole self emerges here: the romantic whose marvelous poemas de amor have enthralled generations, the Communist politician who persisted in a rosy view of the Soviet Union, the narcissist whose trysts sometimes sound disturbingly like sexual assault, and the humanitarian who helped anti-Fascist refugees from the Spanish Civil War escape to Chile. Empathetic but unflinching when occasion calls for criticism, Eisner weaves his subject's stanzas that resonate with the poet's personal stories. A real treat is the who's who of intellectual luminaries who make cameos throughout, revealing the synergistic inter-connectivity of Latin American, North American, and European literary and leftist traditions. -VERDICT A definitive biography and instant classic. [See Prepub Alert, 9/25/17.]-Michael Rodriguez, Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Publishers Weekly Review

Neruda scholar and translator Eisner (The Essential Neruda) provides a bracingly comprehensive and authoritative account of the "poetry, personality, and politics" of one of the 20th century's most revered poets. The heavily researched narrative illustrates how Neruda's formative years in Chile, volunteer role on the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War, frequent travels as diplomat and cultural ambassador, marriages and affairs, and "ambition and belief in his own greatness" shaped his poetry. Claiming to be "neither unbiased nor hagiographic," Eisner doesn't let the enchantment of the verse soften his disapproval of the poet's serial adultery or mistreatment of women, and questions Neruda's self-appointed "people's poet" status. Nevertheless, the thematic arc of Neruda's poetic vocation is invitingly presented; several of his books are given a patient and thorough analysis, including the "monumental cultural event" of the early work Twenty Love Poems, published in 1924. Meanwhile, the descriptions of places where Neruda lived and traveled are poetry themselves, such as Eisner's description of how the young Neruda would "watch the light blue ocean pulse its universal heartbeat." This efficient and moving study should delight scholars and poets with its depth of detail and excellent translations, and may even draw new admirers who share Neruda's belief that "poetry is like bread; it should be shared... by all our vast, incredible, extraordinary family of humanity." (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Booklist Review

As author, translator, and filmmaker, Eisner has devoted most of his creative and intellectual career to the work of Pablo Neruda, editing The Essential Neruda: Selected Poems (2004) and producing a documentary biopic narrated by Neruda's Chilean comadre, best-selling writer Isabel Allende. In this comprehensive biography, Eisner covers Neruda's life from baby steps to final breath, charting the poet's childhood and adolescence, emergence into literary fame and on the public stage as well as his numerous setbacks, including affairs, drug use, and eventual exile from his homeland. While a hefty volume, Eisner's exacting and evocative prose will compel readers through each stage of the poet's life. The influence of a strong-headed, hard-working, absentee father on little Neftalí, as Neruda was called, is just one facet of the gemstone Eisner unearths from the past of Chile's best-known icon. A lifelong scholar of Neruda, a dedicated advocate of the poetry, and a scrutinizing critic of the man himself, Eisner succeeds in sharing the story of the People's Poet and his life's many callings in this new standard-bearer among Neruda biographies.--Báez, Diego Copyright 2018 Booklist

Kirkus Book Review

An empathetic biography of the Chilean Nobel Prize winner.For more than 20 years, Eisner (The Essential Neruda: Selected Poems, 2004) has steeped himself in the life and works of Pablo Neruda (1904-1973), resulting in a newly translated edition of his poetry, a documentary film, and this thoroughly researched, respectful, and evenhanded biography. Born Ricardo Neftal Reyes Basoalto, the poet began to use his pen name in 1920 in order to hide his publications from his father, who vehemently disapproved of his son's vocation. Fame came early: by the time he was 19, "such was his stature," Eisner writes, "that he had disciples who would dress like him, copy his metaphors, andfollow him around the city." Neruda's reputation and popularity grew with his prolific output, and he became "the public poet, a people's poet." As a young man, though, needing to earn more than poetry could provide, he joined the Chilean diplomatic corps, taking assignments in Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Buenos Aires, and Spain. His outspoken political liberalism was contradicted by a "pattern of disturbing misogynistic behavior" and sense of entitlement and superiority. In his memoirs, for example, he admits to raping a Tamil servant, whom he perceived "as inhuman, a piece of stone." Sexually, "he was comfortable with the role of aggressoreven predator," and he often juggled more than one lover at a time. Lauded for his humanitarian views, he nevertheless neglected his first wife and their daughter, who was born with a birth defect and died at the age of 8. As a senator representing the Communist Party and champion of Stalin, Neruda finally "saw the errors of Stalinism and was emboldened enough to reject them." Some detractors criticized him as a "Champagne Communist," who enjoyed luxury; admirers praised his fervent opposition to Franco. Beginning in 1949, when Neruda denounced Chile's president for his oppression of workers, he was forced into hiding and, finally, exile.Perceptive readings of Neruda's poems are contextualized by an absorbing historical, cultural, and political chronology. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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