Roy Fuller - Books

Books

  • Poems (1939)
  • The Middle of a War (1942)
  • A Lost Season (1944),
  • Savage gold (1946)
  • With My Little Eye (1948)
  • Epitaphs and Occasions (1949)
  • The Second Curtain (1953)
  • Counterparts (1954)
  • Image of a Society (1956)
  • Brutus’s Orchard (1957)
  • Fantasy and Fugue (1957)
  • Byron for Today (1958)
  • New poems (1968)
  • Off Course: Poems (1969)
  • The Carnal island (1970)
  • Seen Grandpa Lately? (1972)
  • Song Cycle from a Record Sleeve (1972)
  • Tiny Tears (1973)
  • Owls and Artificers: Oxford lectures on poetry (1974)
  • Professors and Gods: Last Oxford Lectures on Poetry (1975)
  • From the Joke Shop (1975)
  • The Joke Shop Annexe (1975)
  • An Ill-Governed Coast: Poems (1976)
  • Poor Roy (1977)
  • The Reign of Sparrows (1980)
  • Souvenirs (1980)
  • Fellow Mortals: An anthology of animal verse (1981)
  • More About Tompkins, and other light verse (1981)
  • House and Shop (1982)
  • The Individual and his Times: A selection of the poetry of Roy Fuller (1982) with V. J. Lee
  • Vamp Till Ready: Further memoirs (1982)
  • Upright Downfall (1983) with Barbara Giles and Adrian Rumble,
  • As from the Thirties (1983)
  • Home and Dry: Memoirs III (1984)
  • Mianserin Sonnets (1984)
  • Subsequent to Summer (1985)
  • Twelfth Night: A personal view (1985)
  • New and Collected Poems, 1934-84 (1985)
  • Outside the Canon (1986)
  • Murder in Mind (1986)
  • Lessons of the Summer (1987)
  • The Ruined Boys (1987)
  • Consolations (1987)
  • Available for Dreams (1989)
  • Stares (1990)
  • Spanner and Pen: Post-war memoirs (1991)
Persondata
Name Fuller, Roy
Alternative names
Short description
Date of birth 11 February 1912
Place of birth
Date of death 27 September 1991
Place of death

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Famous quotes containing the word books:

    Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested.
    Francis Bacon (1561–1626)

    There are books so alive that you’re always afraid that while you weren’t reading, the book has gone and changed, has shifted like a river; while you went on living, it went on living too, and like a river moved on and moved away. No one has stepped twice into the same river. But did anyone ever step twice into the same book?
    Marina Tsvetaeva (1892–1941)

    Writers ought to be regarded as wrongdoers who deserve to be acquitted or pardoned only in the rarest cases: that would be a way to keep books from getting out of hand.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)