Five Reasons Everyone Should Know George Meredith

One of the things we like to do atย Interesting Literature is find authors who aren’t as celebrated as they perhaps should be, and find some reasons why they should be better known, if not more widely read. A perfect case in point is George Meredith (1828-1909), the Victorian poet and novelist. Although he was popular … Read more

Guest Blog: Are Video Games Literature?

By Dr Alistair Brown, Durham University To ask “Are video games literature?โ€ seems a pointless kind of question, like pondering whether a film is the same thing as a poem, or whether a Rembrandt painting tastes like cheese. Yet asking this question is a necessary provocation, because it helps us to think about how and … Read more

T. E. Hulme: The First Modern Poet?

Who wrote the first modern English poem? When โ€“ and, indeed, where โ€“ was it written? There are numerous candidates, but one could do worse than propose the answer โ€˜T. E. Hulme, in 1908, on the back of a hotel bill.โ€™ This poem, โ€˜A City Sunsetโ€™, would, along with a handful of others by Hulme, … Read more

Guest Blog: Ernest J. Gaines – At Home in the Pelican State

By Lillie Anne Brown, Florida A&M University The literary work of Ernest J. Gaines intersects history and culture with universal themes of self-respect, human dignity and personal integrity. His novels pay homage to ordinary black citizens who not only deserve respect in their everyday lives but crave it as a matter of order and sensibility. … Read more

Edgar Allan Poe: Poet and Prophet

There is a story that, while serving as a young cadet, Edgar Allan Poe was expelled for reporting to a military march wearing nothing but a pair of white gloves. It appears that this is an urban legend, but there are many aspects of Poe’s life and work which are true, and often surprising. He … Read more