John Anthony Burgess Wilson (1917-93) was an industrious writer. He published over fifty books, thousands of essays and numerous drafts and fragments survive. He predicted many of the struggles and challenges of his own and the following century. His most famous book is A Clockwork Orange (1962), later adapted into a controversial film by Stanley Kubrick. The linguistic innovations of that novel, the strict formal devices used to contain them, and its range of themes are all to be found too in Burgess's poetry, an area of his work where he was at once most free and most experimental. It is his least exposed and most complex and eloquent area of achievement, now revealed at last in all its richness. His flair for words, formal discipline, experimentalism, and fondness for variousness mark every page.
L'orange mécanique : Le roman qui a inspiré le film culte de Stanley Kubrick
Anthony Burgess
audiobookThe Devil Prefers Mozart : On Music and Musicians, 1962-1993
Anthony Burgess
bookKellopeli appelsiini
Anthony Burgess
audiobookA Clockwork Orange :
Anthony Burgess
audiobookbookCollected Poems
Anthony Burgess
bookThe Ink Trade: Selected Journalism 1961-1993
Anthony Burgess
book