Letters from Iceland

Author(s): W. H. Auden

Biography

General Information

  • : 9780571132973
  • : Faber & Faber
  • : Faber & Faber
  • : 0.336
  • : 31 December 1997
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : W. H. Auden
  • : Paperback
  • : 914.912044
  • : 256
  • : illustrations, map, bibliography

More About The Product

Letters from Iceland, by W. H. Auden and Louis MacNeice, is one of the most entertaining books in modern literature, amounting to a highly amusing and unorthodox travel book from two giants of twentieth-century poetry.

Louis MacNeice was born in Belfast in 1907, the son of a Church of Ireland rector, later a bishop. He was educated in England at Sherborne, Marlborough and Merton College, Oxford. His first book of poems, Blind Fireworks, appeared in 1929, and he subsequently worked as a translator, literary critic, playwright, autobiographer, BBC producer and feature writer. The Burning Perch, his last volume of poems, appeared shortly before his death in 1963. W. H. Auden was born in York in 1907 and brought up in Birmingham. His first book, Poems, was published by T. S. Eliot at Faber in 1930. He went to Spain during the civil war, to Iceland (with Louis MacNeice) and later travelled to China. In 1939 he and Christopher Isherwood left for America, where Auden spent the next fifteen years lecturing, reviewing, writing poetry and opera librettos, and editing anthologies. He became an American citizen in 1946, and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1948. In 1956 he was elected Professor of Poetry at Oxford, and a year later went to live in Kirchstetten in Austria, after spending several summers on Ischia. He died in Vienna in 1973.