Ian Hamilton's last book, published posthumously in 2002, is a
typically brilliant revisiting of the concept of Samuel Johnson's
classic "Lives of the English Poets," wherein Hamilton considers 45
deceased poets of the twentieth century, offering his personal
estimation of what claims they will have on posterity and 'against
oblivion.' Examples of each poet's verse accompany Hamilton's text,
making the book both a provocative primer and a kind of critical
anthology.
'The affective power of this book... lies in its understatement
and its understanding of what we might care about. From a century
of Manifestoes and Movements, Hamilton works as a corrective for
the local and particular... his idea of poetry, of what made
greatness in poetry, emerges intact from each measured sentence.
His criticism always pointed you towards all that he could find
that was true in a piece of writing.' Tim Adams, Observer
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