Explores how different cultural contexts have influenced the way poets represent Jesus....There is a fascinating chapter on Arabic poetry, T.S. Eliot, cruelty, and waste and another on Samuel Beckett leading back to W.H. Auden....Will interest scholars of poetry and religion as well as general readers of poetry. * Library Journal *
The Poets' Jesus is an absorbing book, a passionate and timely survey of the way modern poets have 'configured' the protagonist of the Christian story. With seemingly effortless grace, Peggy Rosenthal covers an astonishing amount of poetic territory--both spiritual and geographical. From European and American poets to the less well-known writers of Africa and the Middle East, from a Jesus who is depicted as frail or absent to a resurgent Jesus who in recent decades is mysteriously present, Rosenthal is there to enlarge the range and depth of our understanding. With her profound sensitivity for things spiritual and literary, Rosenthal is the perfect guide for the pilgrim in search of the Word within the poet's words. * Gregory Wolfe, Editor, Image: A Journal of the Arts and Religion *
Peggy Rosenthal's easygoing and often droll voice comes through on every page, as she guides her reader on a world tour of poetry centered on Jesus. Learned and accessible (never abstruse), The Poets' Jesus is respectful of scholarship without being burdened by its agendas or jargon. Rosenthal's thumbnail sketches of poets' lives, historical events, and literary movements demonstrate her truly global range, but she never loses her focus on the figure of Jesus, re-embodied in verse by a stunning variety of poets. A superb companion to the Oxford anthology, Divine Inspiration: The Life of Jesus in World Poetry (ed. Robert Atwan, George Dardess, and Peggy Rosenthal), The Poets' Jesus shares its laudable aim of showing how poets far afield express diverse versions of Jesus and Christ. * Suzanne Keen, Washington and Lee University *
[The Poets' Jesus] is a short, reader-friendly account of how poets have rendered Jesus, primarily from the 19th century to the present. This book is also, in passing, a swift overview of the last two centuries of Christian theology and Western culture. * Peter Steinfels, The New York Times *