Denise Gigante is Professor of English at Stanford University.
Beautifully written… [It] comes closest to answering the question
of when Keats became a great writer… Gigante’s method of writing
the Lives of John and George in parallel allows her to bring into
focus the key fact that other biographers sometimes forget: that
the reason why Keats went north in the first place was to say
goodbye to George as he set sail for America from Liverpool.
George’s distance—and, soon after, the even profounder absence
created by [their brother] Tom’s death—was the primary force that
shaped Keats in the year from the autumn of 1818 when he wrote his
greatest poetry.
*Times Literary Supplement*
There have been at least ten major literary biographies of Keats
over the last fifty years, and several of them remain classics of
the genre… Yet fresh and more dispassionate points of view are
still possible. Denise Gigante, in The Keats Brothers, gives us the
story as seen essentially from the outside, through the eyes of
Keats’s younger brothers Tom and especially George, the least like
the poet… Far from reducing Keats, this fraternal view of a more
vulnerable man has the paradoxical effect of making Keats even more
striking and vivid, as no doubt Gigante intended.
*New York Review of Books*
Gigante has had the clever idea of telling the stories of John and
George as parallel lives, a dual biography of brothers. Of course,
no single achievement of George’s matches John’s in any imaginable
way… The challenge for Gigante is to give sufficiently rich detail
concerning George’s travels in America to outweigh the conspicuous
achievement gap between the two brothers. Mostly, she succeeds
brilliantly. The American wilderness, she points out, had long
appealed to English poets, as a land of utopian social possibility
and sublime natural imagery… Gigante memorably contrasts these
imaginary worlds with the slovenly wilderness and grimy inhabitants
that George and Georgiana witnessed as they traveled by barge and
wagon into the interior… The book ends splendidly…with the
apparition of Oscar Wilde, long after George’s death by
tuberculosis in 1841, lecturing on John Keats, ‘the real Adonis of
our age,’ to the people of Louisville in 1882, and admiring Keats’s
manuscripts in the hands of his niece, Emma.
*New York Times Book Review*
There have been plenty of good biographies of Keats but Denise
Gigante has had the bright idea of writing a dual biography
intertwining the sad history of John with the much less well-known
story of his brother George… Gigante examines their sometimes
strained fraternal intimacy in this resourceful and engaging book…
Some of the most gripping pages in this lively and consistently
interesting book are not about poetry at all, but rather recreate
the adventures of the George Keatses across America, through Ohio
to Cincinnati and on to Louisville. Gigante portrays very well the
sheer discomfort of it all, the whiskey-soaked world of the
steamboats, the reckless and chaotic entrepreneurialism and the
accompanying ecological horrors of forest-clearing—out of which
George did very nicely thank you… Gigante chooses to tell the story
of Keats’s last months by flipping to and fro between George in
America and John, first in London and then in Italy, failing in the
grip of his appalling disease, with ‘no religion to support him’
(as Joseph Severn, his companion in the last weeks, said). This
decision gives the book a ‘meanwhile back at the ranch’ quality
which is nothing but a pleasure, and creates some sad contrasts
that Gigante is too well mannered to labor… The decision to tell
their lives in parallel does make a kind of sense, and Denise
Gigante has done it with much style.
*Literary Review*
Denise Gigante’s lively The Keats Brothers is a dual biography in
which both John and George play equal parts… Gigante details the
brothers’ lives in Great Britain and America but excels when
discussing John’s poems—calling attention to less familiar works
like ‘Hither, hither, love.’
*Wall Street Journal*
What makes Gigante’s approach different…is her determination to
weave the life of the poet back into the family woof, to see the
Keats siblings John, George, Tom, and Fanny as their own most
relevant personal and social unit, ‘unmoored’ and isolated from
society as they were by the early deaths of their parents… It is
George’s life that generates everything that is rich and strange
about the biography, and there is much to relish in Gigante’s
extensively researched and detailed account of the American
republic during the early decades of the nineteenth century.
*Australian Book Review*
In The Keats Brothers, Denise Gigante has crafted a detailed,
fast-moving life of this strong-minded poet and the siblings who
helped sustain him… Out of primary documents she reanimates a major
poet and his world, and crafts a transatlantic adventure story with
a novelist’s gift for moving narrative along. In brief, Gigante
convincingly demonstrates that George Keats, the poet’s junior by
sixteen months, served as John’s ‘muse.’
*Quarterly Conversation*
We not only learn a lot about George, who invariably and inevitably
plays only a minor role in biographies of his brother—but as the
lives illuminate each other, new light is shed upon material that
we thought we knew already… Why is The Keats Brothers such a
terrific read? What is the secret of this stunning achievement, and
what makes this book so unputdownable?… The first is that [Gigante]
is a hell of a storyteller. Departing from Plutarch’s model,
Gigante adroitly alternates between John’s life and George’s,
counterpointing the one with the other, drawing out parallels and
contrasts with an ease that can inspire only admiration… The second
reason is that Gigante possesses imagination to an uncommon degree.
And what is a biography without imagination, empathy and judgement?
The opening pages alone (set in Margate in 1816) and the epilogue
(Oscar Wilde visiting Louisville, Kentucky, in 1882) are dazzling
gems of inspired life writing—but there are many, many more such
passages… Gigante has that eye for the telling detail that only the
born storyteller has—and, pace Plutarch, she gives us both lives
and history: her vignettes of Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, of New
York and Louisville are first-rate history made alive—they open up
a new world, and the New World, to Keats scholars. In a way
different from William Wordsworth, John Keats knew how to make
poetry out of loss. In Denise Gigante he has found a congenial
biographer, writing as she does about what remains, even if there
is all ocean between.
*Times Higher Education*
[Gigante’s] book, with its transatlantic sweep and epic
narrative—including cameos from John James Audubon, Emerson, and
more—offers a detailed study of the stunning vicissitudes of the
brothers’ lives. Even those familiar with the poet’s timeline will
see it anew through the lens of this intense sibling relationship…
As she unravels the compelling story of John’s and George’s lives,
Gigante easily overturns stereotypes about academics churning out
dry prose. She has the descriptive power of a novelist or poet… The
Keats Brothers is a major accomplishment, one that will surely
influence biographies of Keats yet to come.
*Barnes & Noble Review*
A bold, expressive style makes this an engaging narrative
throughout. The love, misunderstanding, and rivalry between a
spiritual adventurer and a worldly one are emblematic of contrasts
in 19th-century British culture.
*Choice*
[The Keats Brothers] takes a step beyond standard biographies in
several ways. Most importantly, it explores the central role George
played in recognizing and emotionally supporting John’s genius.
*Publishers Weekly*
It is a tribute to Gigante that she adds so much to our
understanding of Keats’s life by going beyond the books of Bate,
Ward, Gittings, and Motion. This is accomplished not only through
original research but through new insights, many of them provided
by her deep sense of John and George as brothers.
*Harold Bloom*
A tremendous amount of research has gone into this dual biography
of John and George Keats, and it has paid off handsomely,
especially in the sections on George’s life in America. This vivid
and lively biography will appeal to readers who care about Keats’s
poetry and life as well as those interested in the transatlantic
phenomenon of Romanticism, embodied in sibling forms in the two
brothers.
*David Mikics, University of Houston*
If we read the orphaning of John Keats as the dominant
autobiographic source of the imagination in his poetry—including
the early deaths of his parents and his brother Tom—we must
acknowledge that George Keats’s emigration to America, in June
1818, is even more crucial to the great writing—including the
extraordinary letters as well as the poems—that follows. Denise
Gigante’s The Keats Brothers is as unique as it is compelling in
this story of the separation between George and John. And it is
brilliant in its understanding of the consequences of the parting
to the poet’s life and art—as both desperation and inspiration. The
narrative of the necessity and bravery of the brother who leaves
England for the frontier of a new and wild country has for too long
been neglected. With rare depth, thoroughness, and grace, Gigante
brings into balance the American half of the whole of John Keats’s
tragic biography.
*Stanley Plumly, University of Maryland*
A thoroughly researched and beautifully written account that has
some of the appeal of a New Yorker profile.
*Jack Stillinger, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign*
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