Ballie Gifford Prize-winner Philip Hoare for William Blake and the Sea Monsters of Love
Wednesday 30th April
Topping & Company Booksellers of Bath, York Street, Bath, Somerset BA1 1NG
6.30pm
7pm

'Undoubtedly Hoare's masterpiece' Olivia Laing
How one visionary inspired 200 years of art, poetry, and protest...
Weaving between the historical, cultural and personal, award-winning author Philip Hoare reveals a web of creative minds and artistic iconoclasts fired with the wild and revolutionary genius of William Blake.
In 1973, Derek Jarman set off from London to film the stones of Avebury. He was following in the footsteps of Paul Nash, who had photographed the ancient megaliths a generation before. Standing in that muddy field, by those stones, both artists had felt a direct connection to their hero - a man who had died a long, long time ago, yet who remained electrically alive to them.
In this alluring and poetic odyssey, Philip Hoare traces the enduring legacy of William Blake and how he came to inspire so many creative lives. Reaching out of his past and into our future, Blake draws together the natural world and metaphysical realms, merging the human and the animal and the spiritual, firing up twentieth-century artists, filmmakers, poets, writers and musicians with his radical promise of absolute freedom. This stirring, deeply felt book brings us back to Blake and shows that art still has the power to create positive change.
'I cannot think of a more original writer at work today. For Hoare, all art flows through life like the air we breathe, like thought, or the beat of the heart: the two are never separate.' Laura Cumming
Philip Hoare is the author of ten works of non-fiction. His Leviathan won the Ballie Gifford Prize, and the New York Times praised his last book, Albert and the Whale, as the result of ‘the forceful weather system that is Hoare’s imagination’.