Book reviews for "Patterson,_Geoffrey" sorted by average review score:
Chaucer and the Subject of History
Published in Paperback by Univ of Wisconsin Pr (1991)
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An essential book for students of Chaucer
Patterson's book a crucial text in Chaucer studies
Patterson's book remains the classic new historicist study of the Chaucerian corpus. Construing his argument around the emergence of the self-aware subject in the late Middle Ages, Patterson opens his study with a an eloquent explanation of the interrelatedness of modernity and subjectivity. Chapters 1 & 2 set forth the parameters of his main thesis, noting how the subject is always constructed through history, rather than in opposition to it (despite the claims of these subjects to the contrary). While chapter 3's examination of the Knight's Tale is perhaps overdetermined by the theoretical models of the first two chapters, the rest of the book, particularly chapters 6 and 8, demonstrates Patterson's thinking and writing at its best, especially in his riveting analysis of the relationship between te Pardoner's nihilism and the construction of his subjectivity. All in all, the book provides an illuminating new assessment of Chaucer's place in the historical development of the modern subject. It is still a standard in Chaucer studies and I recommend it wholeheartedly.
Indigo and the Whale
Published in Paperback by Frances Lincoln Ltd (06 March, 1997)
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Boy Meets Whale (In a Different Setting)
A young boy, Indigo, wants to be a musician, not the fisherman that his traditionalist father is. When he reveals this to his father, the father throws the boy's most prized possesion into the ocean. Soon the father takes ill and Indigo is forced to take the boat out on his own. What happens next is a journey that will envelope the reader into a fantastical story about life, value, and one of the ocean's most loved creatures: the whale. This story is the type of story that doesn't hold back on the grasp of determination and what the consequences are of sticking to your guns. It also is not overly dramatic and graphic either so that kindergarters can even understand it.
All About Bread
Published in Paperback by Diamond Farm Book Pubns (2000)
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Borrowed Plumes
Published in Hardcover by Scholastic Ltd (31 December, 1990)
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Chestnut Farm Eighteen Sixty
Published in Hardcover by E P Dutton (1980)
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Dairy Farming
Published in Hardcover by E P Dutton (1984)
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Fish from the Sea
Published in Paperback by Scholastic Ltd ()
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The Goose That Laid the Golden Egg
Published in Paperback by Pan Macmillan (09 March, 1990)
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Jonah and the Whale
Published in Hardcover by Lothrop Lee & Shepard (1992)
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The Lion and the Gypsy
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday Books (1990)
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His is not always a highly legible book since there is so much going on, and occasionally one gets the feeling that Patterson has too much to tell us (the sheer number and volume of the footnotes are indicative of his erudition).
This is not the forum to get into a scholarly discussion of the pros and cons of this title, and a short review could never do justice to Patterson's range and command of discourse. Allow me to point out one tiny thing: Patterson, in choosing mottos for his chapters from Don DeLillo's "Libra," manages to show how Chaucer studies are indeed still relevant, how the works of an author (Patterson doesn't limit himself to the "Canterbury Tales"--see his discussion of "Anelida and Arcite") dead for hundreds of years still is meaningful, if one reads him carefully, not just but also against the grain.