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More Than 100 Of His Poems From The Yukon Ballads To Bohemian Paris And The World War.
"This anthology proposes a varied selection of some 260 extracts of Robert William Service (1874-1954) best poems and quotes collected by thematics -- freedom, love, work, success, nature, happiness - everyday concerns as well as philosophical quests arising in our life; a timeless source of inspiration and wisdom which are still moving people everyday as explained touchingly by some of his admirers. Including a brief biography, the vigorous, colourful, humorous and sensitive ballads of the most widely read poet of his time are innovatively revived now, thanks to the selection and the illustrations of his great-granddaughter Charlotte Service-Longépé, author regarded as the greatest authority on the life and works of Robert W. Service."--Page 4 of cover.
The writing of Robert W. Service is mostly known through his poems and ballads. Immortalized by his two iconic ballads, "The Cremation of Sam McGee" and "The Shooting of Dan McGrew," he has entered the world’s imagination as the Bard of the Yukon. But Service was much more than a chronicler of the Great North. A traveller and adventurer who tried his hand at many occupations, Service left a fascinating set of impressions: the successful literary life in the course of which he produced everything from poems and ballads to fictional romance to thrillers and how to stave off the dreary process of aging. Robert W. Service is a fresh selection of the most interesting and significant works of the author with a biographical introduction and a select bibliography of additional readings.
Robert Service wrote in the golden years of the Klondike -- of the rough and ready men, and women just as tough. No-one in Robert's world (real or imagined) minced words or had any self-consciousness about them. It was live and let live and sometimes kill or be killed. Reading his poems transports us back to that frozen place in nature when it was literally every man and every woman for him/herself, yet Robert conveys to us not only a sensitivity (in his poem extolling the simple light switch -- something quite novel in those times, especially in the Klondike), but the beauties he saw in the others -- gathered around the village's first "grammyphone", hearing the voice of "canned man" coming from it -- some savages taking to their canoes because it seems demonic, yet others equally savage, enraptured by this miracle of sound. Robert Service touches the heart and soul of the rough and raw Klondike in the early 1900's, and shows us the soul's emotions and colors from inky black to pure gold.
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