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Book reviews for "Allott,_Kenneth" sorted by average review score:
Collected poems
Published in Unknown Binding by Secker and Warburg ()
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Allott, the neglected master.
Arnold (Penguin Poetry Library)
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (September, 1985)
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Art of Graham Greene
Published in Textbook Binding by Russell&Russell Pub (June, 1963)
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Jules Verne.
Published in Hardcover by Associated Faculty Pr Inc (June, 1970)
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Kenneth Allott and the thirties : delivered on 17 January, 1980
Published in Unknown Binding by University of Liverpool ()
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Poems of Matthew Arnold
Published in Textbook Binding by W.W. Norton & Company (January, 1900)
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In my opinion Allott's greatest ever poem is "The Statue" - a romantic poem that could be addressed to anyone at any time, be they man, woman, beast, or child, gay or straight, black or white, able or disabled. It is asexual and ambiguous yet tender and loving.
The best of Allott's other poems include:
Morning And Evening, a powerful narrative poem which exemplifies his use of reverse bathos to perfection in building up a oppressive and scary portrait of life in wartime reduced to vignettes and vistas, still-lives and destruction.
Aunt Sally Speaks: an aggressive and vicious rant, a demand for answers that will probably never be answered, a howl of defiance with a trembling undercurrent of terror. A savage yet beautiful poem which attacks the indifference of man, and his sophisticated vulnerability in an indifferent and cruel world.
I also recommend The Children, Lament for a Cricket Eleven, Calenture, Exodus, Fete Champetre, Offering, and the poem that starts "Say goodnight and step over the mountain"
Allott wrote scarcely a bad poem (although there are a few in this collection that are dubious) and even in his lesser works there are marvellous images and powerful insights. I leave you with the last verse of Ode in Wartime, which Roy Fuller draws our attention to in his foreword:
Phosphor shall rise above a moon of sorrow,
And we shall know such a day as never was,
Tomorrow, or a day after tomorrow,
Do what you will and when, love whom you please.