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The 100 best nonfiction books: No 46 – The Waste Land by TS Eliot (1922)

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TS Eliot’s long poem, written in extremis, came to embody the spirit of the years following the first world war

The Great War was a mass slaughter. It also became the catalyst for a social and cultural earthquake. But not until a young American poet began, in 1919, to address the desolate aftermath of this Armageddon did the interwar years begin to acquire the character we now associate with the 1920s, and also become explicable to the survivors of an apocalypse.

The Waste Land has attracted many labels, from the quintessential work of “modernism” to the “poetical equivalent to Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring”. It was also one of those very rare works that both embody and articulate the spirit of the age. As such, it would be adored, vilified, parodied, disparaged, obsessed over, canonised and endlessly recited.

In Eliot's own life, there were no commensurate reconciliations, just the daily torment of his marriage to Vivien

Related: Who is the mysterious ‘Stetson’ in TS Eliot’s Waste Land? One scholar has a clue…

Related: The Poems of TS Eliot: The Annotated Texts, edited by Christopher Ricks and Jim McCue – digested read

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