Review by Choice Review
In a welcome departure from traditional biography--with its often-forensic focus on questions of what, when, and where--Making Darkness Light instead reveals Milton's life and works as Moshenska (Univ. of Oxford, UK) experienced them. This is a book about Milton, but it is also about Moshenska's encounter with Milton, narrating Moshenska's peregrinations through England and Italy in search of various Miltonic sites and monuments. The result is a deeply learned book that offers fresh insights into Milton's life, works, and recurring intellectual and poetic preoccupations. More important, it is a warm and personal book: by bringing himself to these pages, Moshenska enlivens Milton, who comes to seem more real and vivid--yet also stranger and more elusive. Moshenska's Milton refuses easy categorization; he is a writer and a thinker who remains, in the book's evocative term, "molten." Summing Up: Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --Alison Chapman, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Moshenska (A Stain in the Blood), a Professor of English Literature at Oxford University, delivers a strikingly original biography of John Milton (1608--1674). He relies on "rhythms rather than facts" to reconstruct the life of the poet, who grew up in a house full of music and was attuned to musical cadences, which Moshenka suggests he incorporated as a fundamental part of his writing. Moshenska covers crucial moments in Milton's life and intellectual development, describing the day of Milton's birth; his wrestling with the question of "how to be a poet--what such a choice would mean"; his travels in Italy, where he studied the "nature of language" by immersing himself in Italian; and his theological ambitions in Paradise Lost. Personal interjections from Moshenska are peppered throughout and add depth: "Many readers--and I number among them--have struggled with the way in which he depicts God the Father as harsh, cruel, shrilly self-justifying." It's less a by-the-books account of Milton's life, and more like a poetic tour of 17th-century England as revealed by the manuscripts left behind by one of its most prominent writers. Literature lovers of all sorts will find something to savor here. (Dec.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A prismatic portrait of the canonical poet. Oxford literature professor Moshenska takes a fresh perspective on John Milton (1608-1674), the art of biography, and the experience of reading to create a lyrical, meditative narrative about a poet who has seemed to generations of biographers and readers to be "perennially contemporary." It's not possible, Moshenska writes, "to separate the place of Milton's writings in his lifetime from the questionings and imaginings that they can provoke in ours." The author has been haunted by Milton, entangled with him as a reader and teacher, and his captivating, perceptive study reveals a deeply felt connection. Dividing the biography into three parts, the author considers Milton's birth and early life, marked by his growing up in "a house full of music" that, Moshenska believes, made him particularly sensitive to rhythm; his experiences in his late 20s and early 30s, including a "formative and fraught" trip to Italy and meeting with the aged Galileo; and the latter half of his life, when he married, became a father, and emerged as a controversial public figure. At this point, "he presented himself as a learned, urbane, and respectable poet" whose writings on divorce "could make women leave their husbands" and whose political views "threatened the bonds between monarchs and subjects." Moshenska follows Milton's footsteps from his birthplace on Bread Street in London to his travels through Italy; visits Milton's several homes; offers meticulously close, sensitive readings of poems and essays; and reveals "granular details" of turbulent 17th-century English political and religious life. Throughout, the author shares his own intimate responses to Milton's sometimes "alien and challenging" views. Milton, he writes, "was able to be absolutely himself while remaining in some sense foreign to himself, and this strange kind of self-relation I have found rich and useful in making sense of myself." With no aspirations to produce a definitive biography, Moshenska has crafted, instead, an incisive portrayal. An inspired biographical and autobiographical journey. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.