In 'Percy Bysshe Shelly: A Literary Life', Michael O'Neill gives a
knowledgeable and balanced account of Shelley's literary career from his
earliest published work to his last unfinished masterpiece, The Triumph
of Life . The book draws on recent research about the poet and his age,
but its sense of the ways in which texts and contexts interact is
sharply independent. Issues discussed include Shelley's social
background, his radical politics and his complex response to
Enlightenment rationalism. O'Neill stresses Shelley's often disappointed
search for an audience, connecting it with the growing sophistication of
his poetry and poetics. For Shelley, a poet was the 'combined product'
of 'internal powers' and 'external influences' (Preface to Prometheus
Unbound ); this book explores how such a combination manifests itself in
his own writings.