Denis Glover could be witty, intelligent, alarmingly frank, and
frequently highly entertaining. A widely admired poet, honoured naval
commander, gifted printer, and typographer, Denis Glover was founder of
the Caxton Press in Christchurch. For 15 years from 1935 he directed a
publishing programme that did much to define New Zealand literature for
its day, and for much of the rest of the century. His literary work was
suspended for war service in the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy,
during which he earned a DSC for his activities in the Normandy
landings. But he was also a serial philanderer and prodigious drinker,
and his private life increasingly disintegrated around him, more and
more publicly. And yet his energy as a correspondent appeared never to
wane, and almost to the end he confided openly, prolifically, and
entertainingly to hundreds of acquaintances and confidants. In this
magnificent volume Sarah Shieff presents around 500 of Glover's letters
to around 110 people, drawn from an archive of nearly 3000 letters to
over 430 recipients.