Author:Neil Corcoran
In 2016, Bob Dylan received the Nobel Prize in Literature ‘for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition’. This collection of essays by leading poets and critics – with a new foreword by Will Self – examines Dylan’s poetic genius, as well as his astounding cultural influence over the decades.
‘From Orpheus to Faiz, song and poetry have been closely linked. Dylan is the brilliant inheritor of the bardic tradition’ Salman Rushdie
‘The most significant Western popular artist in any form or medium of the past sixty years’ Will Self
‘For fifty and some years he has bent, coaxed, teased and persuaded words into lyric and narrative shapes that are at once extraordinary and inevitable’ Andrew Motion
‘His haunting music and lyrics have always seemed, in the deepest sense, literary’ Joyce Carol Oates
‘There is something inevitable about Bob Dylan… A storyteller pulling out all the stops – metaphor, allegory, repetition, precise detail… His virtue is in his style, his attitude, his disposition to the world’ Simon Armitage
Sinha's gift for finding humour in it all makes him worth a listen
—— The TelegraphPresent on every page is the creative sparkle and compellingly generous spirit of a man who was in every way an uncompromising individual
—— The TimesIn these diaries... the artist and film director emerges as a down-to-earth visionary... this perceptive and enjoyable work is something of a miracle
—— IndependentFor all his anger, Jarman never seems brutalised. He retains his humanity and his good humour. His is a wonderfully garrulous, mercurial, polymathic daemon
—— Literary ReviewJarman [is] the sort of troublemaking visionary who one day may be compared with Blake
—— John Gill , Time OutAn inspiring diary of a life well lived
—— BBC Gardeners’ WorldJoy and life and more life and more joy and street corners and making a garden out of stones and making films and love
—— Tilda Swinton