About the Author:
Esther Casier Quinn is Professor Emerita at Hunter College, City University of New York. She received her Ph.D. at Columbia University. Professor Quinn belongs to several literary societies with a focus on medieval literature including the New Chaucer Society.
Review:
A great pleasure to read. Esther Quinn's study is unmistakably the work of a born teacher whose sympathetic understanding of Chaucer shines forth on every page. (Winthrop Wetherbee, Cornell University)
Esther Quinn, over the years, has been one of our most insightful, discriminating interpreters of medieval texts. I look forward to her new study of Chaucer. (James M. Dean, University of Delaware)
Quinn presents Chaucer's poetry as a veiled commentary on political events of his time....Quinn's survey of the poetry is impressive. The reader will be stimulated by the author's ability to find allusions to Richard II and others in the most unexpected places. Good bibliography. Recommended. (CHOICE, December 2008)
There is a particular pleasure in encountering the reflections of a seasoned scholar as she discusses a poet whose work she has read and taught for the larger part of her life. While such a book may not offer the excitement of revisionist polemic and cutting-edge theory, it furnishes the quieter interest of a mind honed by many years of scholarship and grappling with splendid texts. [Quinn's analysis of the rarely studied 'Prayer to Our Lady,' which she reads as a very personal tribute to the feminineby a poet dealing with his own 'feelings of guilt, remorse, and repentance,' is moving and profound. (Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies, July 2009)
This is, to say the least, a stimulating book, in many ways a superb book. It is also a feverish book, down to the final sentences Very few who began the war lasted to the end. The world has changed forever. Pegg delivers, as promised, a breathtaking revision. Perhaps we should take a step back and exhale once again, slowly. (College & Research Libraries, July 2009)
In this book notable for its scope―it discusses virtually all of Chaucer's poetry―Esther Casier Quinn offers us a sharply focused snapshot of the current state of Chaucer criticism, as well as some intriguing new readings of her own. Given her earlier groundbreaking work on Seth, the oil of life, and the Dry Tree, her thought-provoking account of the Squire's Tale comes as no surprise; throughout the book, she uses her formulation "the poetics of disguise" to explore some basic issues concerning Chaucer's narrative voice and interests. (John Fyler, Tufts University)
There is a particular pleasure in encountering the reflections of a seasoned scholar as she discusses a poet whose work she has read and taught for the larger part of her life. While such a book may not offer the excitement of revisionist polemic and cutting-edge theory, it furnishes the quieter interest of a mind honed by many years of scholarship and grappling with splendid texts. [Quinn's analysis of the rarely studied 'Prayer to Our Lady,' which she reads as a very personal tribute to the feminine by a poet dealing with his own 'feelings of guilt, remorse, and repentance,' is moving and profound. (Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies, July 2009)
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