The Faerie Queene: Complete in Five Volumes

SKU
26737g

Book One; Book Two; Books Three and Four; Book Five; Book Six and the Mutabilitie Cantos

Edmund Spenser
Series General Editor: Abraham Stoll

2008

Grouped product items
Format ISBN Price Qty
Paper 978-0-87220-941-1
$59.00

eBook available for $44.95. Click HERE for more information.

 

The Faerie Queene from Hackett Publishing Company:

Spenser's great work in five volumes. Each includes its own Introduction, annotation, notes on the text, bibliography, glossary, and index of characters; Spenser's "Letter to Raleigh" and a short Life of Edmund Spenser appear in every volume.

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"Two editions of Spenser are both from the same series, published by Hackett Publishing Company, which is providing inexpensive paperback volumes of The Faerie Queene, under the general editorship of Abraham Stoll.  The volumes printed this year, books 1 and 5, are edited, respectively, by Carol V. Kaske and Stoll himself.  A single volume combining books 3 and 4, edited by Dorothy Stephens, is forthcoming, as is book 6, edited by Andrew Hadfield.  The volumes are attractively printed, with notes at the bottom of the page.  Each volume includes an introduction, the Letter to Raleigh, a brief 'Life of Edmund Spenser,'  textual notes, a glossary, an 'Index of Characters,' and a bibliography.
    "Kaske's introduction to book 1 forms an accessible student guide, touching on a wide range of topics, from versification, genre, and allegory, to 'Spenser's Religious Milieu.'  At the same time, there are fresh flashes of insight, no doubt derived from Kaske's long experience of teaching a complex poem. . . . Eschewing 'political and biographical allegory (p. xvi), the notes offer plenty of help to the student seeking to get behind the veil of Spenser's dark conceit, for they emphasize symbolism and historical context, especially literary context or 'sources.'
    "Stoll's edition of book 5 of the Faerie Queene includes a judicious introduction of considerable merit.  Not simply well written and learned, it partitions the information in an accessible and interesting way.  Stoll is fully attuned to the recent controversies surrounding the Legend of Justice, but he does more than record them for the student reader; he manages to express sympathy for both poet and poem.  Students need to hear the historical nature of Spenser's achievement for English literature, and Stoll leads nicely with this topic: book 5 is 'one of the most challenging meditations on justice in English literature' (p. ix).  Stoll is as sensitive to the violence of book 5 as he is to its strangeness and beauty.  Students will appreciate the short inventory of important works of criticism at the end of each section.  The notes are not as full as Kaske's, but perhaps appropriately so. . . . I look forward to having access to the remaining volumes in this series."
     —Patrick Cheney, Studies in English Literature 1500-1900

 

"Teachers of Spenser will also welcome two more installments of the Hackett editions of separate books of The Faerie Queene under the general editorship of Abraham Stoll, this time on books 2 and on books 3 and 4.  In my view, these are the most attractive, inexpensive, but also comprehensive editions to date, with far better (and easy to read) notes on mythology and name symbolism (matters increasingly foreign to our undergraduates) than almost all previous versions."
     —Catherine Gimelli Martin, Studies in English Literature 1500-1900

 

"The multivolume format provides varied introductions and annotations—a benefit to any student—and facilitates the general reading experience through smaller bindings.  The prefatory material of individual volumes focuses on history, subjects, and ideologies pertinent to specific books.  The edition is thus ideal for classroom use, especially in survey courses or for those who prefer to read several individual books rather than study the poem in its entirety.  The format and language of the editorial input lend themselves to undergraduate study.
     "These editions offer a solid analytical grounding for readers at various levels, and together compile a sound and substantial set of editorial perspectives on Spenser's most famous work."
    —Rachel E. Frier, Sixteenth Century Journal