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ISBN: PB: 9780857425829

Seagull Books

December 2010

624 pp.

21.6x19.1 cm

22 halftones

PB:
£18,99
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Letters to Madeleine

Tender as Memory

"Letters to Madeleine" collects for the first time in English the remarkable letters and poems sent by French poet Guillaume Apollinaire to his fiancee Madeleine Pages during World War I. Stationed in the trenches of Champagne, this man of letters who had been at the forefront of the surrealist movement was transformed overnight into an artilleryman.

The fascinating correspondence bears witness to the typical yet deeply idiosyncratic experience of Apollinaire at an especially crucial moment of his existence as man and artist. Apollinaire shares with Madeleine his thoughts on art and literature from Racine to Tolstoy, and at the same time he uniquely documents the daily life of a soldier at the front during the Great War. As well, the letters reveal intimate and little-known aspects of Apollinaire's personality – from his childhood and tastes to his grandest aesthetic ideas.

Writing about the letters in his biography of Apollinaire, Francis Steegmuller noted, "Nowhere, is there a more 'living picture' of a poet in a war... or, outside of Stendhal, a more vivid picture of war itself". "Letters to Madeleine" is a moving portrait of a poet facing one of humanity's starkest realities, and it will be of interest to not only fans of Apollinaire but those interested in personal accounts of World War I as well.

About the Author

Wilhelm Apollinaris de Kostrowitzki, known by the pseudonym Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918), was among the foremost poets of the early twentieth century. Apollinaire's works include "The Decaying Enchanter", "The Bestiary", "The Spirits", and "Caligrams". He is credited with coining the term surrealism.