‘Outstanding… The best short introduction I have come across’ Sunday Times
When he died at the age of just twenty-five, few imagined John Keats would one day be considered among the greatest poets of all time.
Taking nine of Keats’s best-known poems, Lucasta Miller excavates their backstories and, in doing so, resurrects the real Keats: an outsider from a damaged family whose visceral love of language allowed him to change the face of English literature for ever.
Combining close-up readings with the story of his brief existence, Miller shows us how Keats crafted his groundbreaking poetry and explains why it continues to speak to us across the centuries.
‘One never wants Keats’s life to end so soon; I didn’t want this book to end, either’ TLS Books of the Year
‘Irresistible… [Miller]digs into the backstories of her subject’s most famous poems to uncover aspects of his life and work that challenge well-worn romantic myths’ Wall Street Journal

The Beach House
Lost Lines of Wales
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Rootbound
RSPB British Naturefinder
You Can't Stop The Sun From Shining
Crickhowell High Street Across the Decades
Gift Wrapping
The Cut
RSPB Handbook of British Birds
Fleishman Is in Trouble : Now a major TV series starring Claire Danes & Jesse Eisenberg
Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine
Ten Drugs
Girl in the Walls
The Deep End
I Am, I Am, I Am: Seventeen Brushes With Death : The Breathtaking Number One Bestseller
Life Under Fire


