William Blake and the sea monsters of love

Philip Hoare

Book - 2025

"A revelatory and joyous exploration of how one visionary inspired two hundred years of art, poetry and protest by the acclaimed author of Albert and the Whale. Weaving between the historical, cultural, and personal, award-winning author Philip Hoare reveals a web of creative minds and artistic iconoclasts fired by the wild and revolutionary genius of William Blake. Blake is one of the greatest artists in western history. His art envelops us. He invented a way to put words and images on a page to express his poetry and art in a manner that has never been truly equaled. Even in his own time, his fans and followers were left speechless. Blake's heavenly bodies are our real selves, soaring beyond time and space. His art is a time mac...hine. We can climb aboard and be taken to the stars. Blake accepted no limits to the human spirit. Throughout his life he worked as one artist, two people with his partner, Kate. Together they created their visions of what the world could be, filled with majestic menageries of tygers burning bright and angels in trees, of leviathans and demons and human fleas--and a devil who burns with revolutionary ecstasy. In William Blake and the Sea Monsters of Love, with Philip Hoare as our inimitable guide, Blake rises as a new hope for our own age."--Front flap of dust jacket.

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Subjects
Genres
Creative nonfiction
Biographies
Essais fictionnels
Published
New York : Pegasus Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Philip Hoare (author)
Edition
First Pegasus Books cloth edition
Physical Description
453 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781639368471
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The life and legacy of a wild man. Hoare, the author ofAlbert and the Whale (2021), captures the singular genius of poet, artist, and visionary William Blake (1757-1827) in an exuberant romp through Blake's life, times, and afterlife. An ardent admirer of Blake's "fantastical ideas," Hoare praises him as "the Willy Wonka of art, your golden ticket to other worlds." Blake, Hoare exults, "gave voice to spirits waiting to be released from a tree or a cave. Fertile, sensual, tactile, tortured exalted bodies, unabashed by their disinclination to wear anything other than their own skin. They become entire continents, universes, micro-macrocosms, uttering outrageous messages in speech bubbles edited for the beginning or ending of time." Hoare's well-populated volume includes Blake's devoted wife, Kate; his brother Robert; writers and artists who were inspired by him, from Mary Shelley to the pre-Raphaelites, Aubrey Beardsley to Patti Smith. "The voice of modernity before it began," Blake anticipated James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, T.S. Eliot, surrealist artists--Paul Nash and Eileen Agar, for example--as well as Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. Albert Durer and Oscar Wilde, subjects of Hoare's previous books, make appearances, as does riding master and circus inventor Philip Astley, the Blakes' neighbor in South London, where Blake and Kate happily sat naked in their garden. To Blake, the advent of factories, railroads, and engines felt like an "industrial leviathan" of burgeoning mechanization. "What did all this mean for the soul?" he wondered. "Who asked questions about the wisdom of progress and its stealth?" Hoare foregrounds these concerns as he examines a Blakean universe replete with fairies and spirits, butterflies and stars, sacred monsters and hermaphrodites. Sometimes maddeningly digressive, Hoare's history is, nonetheless, endearingly intimate. Abundantly illustrated. An imaginative response to an enigmatic artist. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.