Mycology, psycho-analysis, music, mythology, linguistics, Christianity,
occultism, Majorca, esoterica...This book for the first time selects the
best from the more than five hundred essays which Robert Graves wrote
about areas of culture which engaged him. His critical diversity
illustrates his eclectic interests and his dazzling genius in making
connections. He engages every kind of reader; whether we agree or
disagree, and he sharpens our own critical skills even as he informs and
entertains us.
His first journal article was written in 1913. He was seventeen. It was
a critique of popular music entitled 'Ragtime', published in the
Charterhouse school magazine The Greyfriar. A lifetime later, his final
published essay was fittingly called 'All Things to All Men' and
published in 1977 in Malahat Review. For sixty-four years of a turbulent
century Graves trained a wary eye, passionately and wryly, on social and
political change, popular culture, religion and economics. His range and
creative originality set him in a class of his own.
Many of these essays evolved out of Graves' literary pursuits and cast
light on his poetry and fiction.