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Book reviews for "Buell,_Lawrence" sorted by average review score:

Longfellow: Selected Poems (Penguin Classics)
Published in Paperback by Penguin USA (Paper) (1988)
Authors: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Lawrence Buell
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Poetry written for the human soul!
Whether you are simply exploring an interest in poetry or are a seasoned reader of the great poets, Longfellow's poems will move you. There is a poem in this collection that is perfect for every mood you could be in. If you are down and need to be lifted up, if you simply want to smile about the beauty of life, or if your heart has been broken, Longfellow's works will speak to your heart. Longfellow's works have spoken to my soul as no other poet or writer has ever before.

you want it you got it
I love this book it is something that men and women would enjoy. I have tons of information on Henry Wadsworth Longfellow because our house is a remake of his he lived from 1807-1882. If I were you I would buy it I am the biggest fan of his I have every single book of poems,songs,and more on him in paperback and hardcover. Buy it!

The best introduction to one of America's best loved poets.
When I was producing a video biography of Longfellow for Macmillan/McGraw-Hill in 1992, I needed a one-volume selection of Longfellow's poetry, and this book did the job very nicely. It includes Longfellow's best-known poems as well as two others that were never published during the poet's lifetime but must be classed with his finest work. The introduction by Lawrence Buell provides a useful biographical sketch and a thoughtful discussion of why Longfellow--the most famous American of his time--is not more widely read today. Buell's observations may get you thinking about this schoolbook poet in a different way.


The Morgesons (Penguin Classics)
Published in Paperback by Penguin USA (Paper) (1997)
Authors: Elizabeth Stoddard, Lawrence Buell, and Sandra A. Zagarell
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Weird but good
The Morgesons is a magnificently strange book that takes the conventions of the 19th-century coming-of-age novel & turns them inside out. It comes so close to being a deliciously cosy, quasi-gothic, read that you find yourself wondering whether you're imagining the peculiarities--& perhaps they are only the natural consequences of transplanting this sort of novel into an American setting, where instead of sheepfolds & Anglican churchiness, barren Cape Cod coastline and cold Calvinism are the order of the day. Obsession with inheritance & the family line & that terrible 19th century question: what should a woman do? runs through the book, whose coldness occasionally gives way to flaring episodes of violence and passion.


Writing for an Endangered World : Literature, Culture, and Environment in the U.S. and Beyond
Published in Paperback by Harvard Univ Pr (2003)
Author: Lawrence Buell
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Reading Between the Lines into the New, New World
Employing a crypto-academic style that is by turns baffling, enervating but often frequently stimulating, Buell puts modernists classics of literature through their paces through the optics of "environmental criticism," a movement of which he and a few others appear to be the primary practictioners (from what I can glean from the book, the bibliography and the liner notes).

For example, his environmental criticism of Moby Dick is really quite a marvelous way to re-imagine the Melville classic as a text in which the boundaries between the consciousnesses of whales and men are elided through Melville's sympathetic and candid reportage of the whaling expedition and his inclusion of chapters on whaling lore. He does another marvelous job on Faulkner's "The Bear" and the collection in which it originally appeared, noting that the narrator's description of the abandoned sawmills, the clear-cut forests and the resulting floods and related catastrophes create an emblematic context for the telling of the vexed, multi-layered story of the end of the Southern elitist hunting tradition through the agency of extractive industrialization. His reading of DeLillo's White Noise restores its enviromental concerns (the Airborne Toxic Event) to its rightful place at the forefront of the DeLillo's topos -- unlike many other recent readings which do not mention this theme. (Buell notes that such ommissions in what is rapidly becoming a touchstone work in the realm of cultural criticism is a disservice to the book and to DeLillo's environmental concerns demonstrated in his other works such as Underworld, a view that I entirely agree with: I was working at DeLillo's publisher at the time of White Noise's release, and it's publication happened to coincide with a real airborne toxic event in New Jersey, a happy coincidence which not only highlighted this imporant aspect of the work, but, happily for the publishers spurred sales of the book in its prescience.)

There are other interesting readings of notable works of fiction and non-fiction through the lens of environmental criticism as well. Too, the introductory chapters which examine the various types of "toxic" discourses and describe how they restrict how we think of our relationship to the natural and man-made worlds are quite good as well. So are the final chapters which deal with changing our conceptions of nature (once primary nature, now a second-hand, or second-nature, which he argues should include manmade enviroments as well). Here he also encourages using the idea of the watershed as an organizing principle of locality and the most appropriate frame of our environmental imagination -- not arbitrary boundaries placed on the landscape either in theory or in practice.

But as you might suspect from the above, Buell covers a lot of territory with this book. Perhaps this is because in advancing the notion of environmental criticism he feels compelled to treat a lot of areas than would normally be necessary in a more deeply populated field of criticism. Don't get me wrong. Just because there's a lot to chew over in this book, doesn't mean it's bad. Much of it quite good, in fact. For instance, Buell is very attentive and inventive in his readings of Whitman, Thoreau, Williams Carlos Williams, Joyce, et. al. He also includes a number of well-selected non-canonical works which illustrate his theses imaginatively. To summarize, good readings, an interesting, if too somtimess too diffuse programme, a defect which can be easily forgiven. Now if only the style was more "grounded."


The Environmental Imagination: Thoreau, Nature Writing and the Formation of American Culture
Published in Paperback by Belknap Pr (1996)
Author: Lawrence Buell
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its academic
I found this to be an annoying book. The subject matter is intriguing but the author's style is so highfalutin, verbose and academic that little real wisdom is effectively imparted to the reader. This is ironic since his subject is Henry David Thoreau who took great care to write plainly. The best writing in the book is in the notes which serve as a good bibliography.


The Design of Literature.
Published in Paperback by Pendulum Pr (1973)
Author: Lawrence. Buell
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Emerson :
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (2003)
Author: Lawrence Buell
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History of the Book in American Culture Vol. 2: James Russell Wiggins Lectures, 1991-97
Published in Paperback by American Antiquarian Society (1998)
Authors: Henry Louis, Jr. Gates, Lawrence Buell, and Mary Kelley
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Literary Transcendentalism: Style and Vision in the American Renaissance
Published in Paperback by Cornell Univ Pr (1975)
Author: Lawrence Buell
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The Morgesons and Other Writings: Published and Unpublished
Published in Paperback by University of Pennsylvania Press (1984)
Authors: Elizabeth Stoddard, Sandra A. Zagarell, and Lawrence Buell
Amazon base price: $21.50
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Leaves of Grass and Selected Prose
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages (01 August, 1981)
Authors: Walt Whitman and Buell Lawrence
Amazon base price: $9.25

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