Now All Roads Lead To France, the Last Years of Edward Thomas
Matthew Hollis
Faber (2011)
In Collection
#5008
0*
Biography
Hardcover 9780571245987
English
Product Details
LoC Classification PR6039.H55 .Z736 2011
LoC Control Number 2011505697
Dewey 821.912
Nationality British
No. of Pages 250
Height x Width 9.6 x 6.3  inch
User Defined
Conflict WW1
Notes
Edward Thomas was perhaps the most beguiling and influential of First World War poets. Now All Roads Lead to France is an account of his final five years, centred on his extraordinary friendship with Robert Frost and Thomas's fatal decision to fight in the war. The book also evokes an astonishingly creative moment in English literature, when London was a battleground for new, ambitious kinds of writing. A generation that included W. B. Yeats, Ezra Pound, Robert Frost and Rupert Brooke were 'making it new' - vehemently and pugnaciously. These larger-than-life characters surround a central figure, tormented by his work and his marriage. But as his friendship with Frost blossomed, Thomas wrote poem after poem, and his emotional affliction began to lift. In 1914 the two friends formed the ideas that would produce some of the most remarkable verse of the twentieth century. But the War put an ocean between them: Frost returned to the safety of New England while Thomas stayed to fight for the Old. It is these roads taken - and those not taken - that are at the heart of this remarkable book, which culminates in Thomas's tragic death on Easter Monday 1917.