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D. M. Thomas.
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Biography EssayD. M. Thomas is widely known for his novel The White Hotel, which quickly rose to the top of the best-seller lists after its American publication in the spring of 1981. Yet, he is als...
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In the following review, Goreau offers unfavorable evaluation of Lying Together and Thomas's “Russian Nights” series. Goreau finds fault in Thomas's preoccupation with theo...
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In the following review, Binyon offers unfavorable assessment of Flying to Love.
“Ten thousand dreams a night, a Dallas psychologist told me, when I dined with her and her black lover, are drea...
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In the following review Houston offers positive assessment of Flying to Love.
Near the end of this novel based on the murder of John F. Kennedy, D. M. Thomas has one of his characters, a psychologist,...
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In the following review, Cheyette offers negative assessment of Pictures at an Exhibition.
The key to Pictures at an Exhibition, D. M. Thomas's tenth novel, can be found in the themes and conte...
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In the following review, O'Brien offers tempered assessment of The Puberty Tree.
It can seem that there are two D. M. Thomases. On the one hand, there is the poet of memorable lyrics and dramat...
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In the following review, Fleming offers favorable assessment of Pictures at an Exhibition.
Pictures at an Exhibition is a fiercely intelligent book, and a shattering experience to read. It opens with ...
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In the following review, Busch offers tempered evaluation of Pictures at an Exhibition, which he describes as “alternately horrifying and annoying.”
In Pictures at an Exhibition, D. M. T...
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In the following review, Dinnage offers favorable assessment of Eating Pavlova.
Freud had no use for the Surrealists, though they thought they were his true disciples; his artistic tastes were convent...
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In the following review, Kincaid offers positive evaluation of Eating Pavlova.
In 1824 Sam Goldwyn, recognizing that “there is nothing really so entertaining as a really great love story,ȁ...
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In the following review, Slavitt offers positive assessment of Lady With a Laptop.
The conceit is quite lovely. What D. M. Thomas apparently dreamed up was a jokey mystery he could write in which Ruth...
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In the following review, Chamberlain offers positive assessment of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn has been an outstanding figure of the century, despite current attempts in Moscow to r...
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In the following review, Woll offers negative evaluation of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
D. M. Thomas, prominent poet and novelist, has a longstanding interest in Russia. His early, controversial novel The...
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In the following review, Dickstein offers unfavorable evaluation of Ararat.
The reader opens Ararat with a mixture of expectations. D. M. Thomas's third novel in four years, it comes in the wak...
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In the following review, Tonkin offers unfavorable assessment of Sphinx.
A sequel to Ararat and Swallow, the third part of D. M. Thomas's planned quartet of Russian novels begins with an unlike...
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In the following review, Stade offers positive evaluation of Sphinx.
American readers know D. M. Thomas best for The White Hotel (1981), a novel remarkable for its tragic sense of recent history, its ...
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In the following review, Eder offers unfavorable assessment of Summit.
When God rested on the seventh day. He really did rest. No phone calls. No catching up on the mail. No reorganizing the files. An...
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In the following review, Dudar offers unfavorable assessment of Memories and Hallucinations.
The distinguished English writer D. M. Thomas interrupts the last chapter of Memories and Hallucinations wi...
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Critical Essay by Michael Mott
Two Voices by D. M. Thomas is at least two collections in one. The confusion is made the worse by the intrusive cover-photographs, clichés of the 1930's av...
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Critical Essay by Alan Brownjohn
Love and Other Deaths: you can take the choice. I don't feel that D. M. Thomas, a poet of ranging and fertile imagination, has yet settled for what he really wa...
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Critical Essay by Alasdair Maclean
D. M. Thomas has divided [Love and Other Deaths] into parts. The first contains more or less traditional poems dealing with family deaths. Often moving and sometimes...
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Critical Essay by John Matthias
There are always plenty of paramours in D. M. Thomas's work, and one must respect, if even at a certain hesitant distance, his nervous, experimental, and erotic ...
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Critical Essay by Peter Scupham
The mysterious privacy to be found in [the various landscapes of The Honeymoon Voyage] is one the poet shares with those divine and human presences who, whether rooted ...
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Critical Essay by Nicholas Shrimpton
D.M. Thomas is a notable translator of modern Russian verse and [The Flute Player] is an imaginative meditation on the themes and landscapes of that literature. Ag...
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Critical Essay by Alex De Jonge
[The Flute Player] is one of the most skillfull, moving and imaginative pieces of fiction I have read in years…. [Mr Thomas] has written a tremendously moving bo...
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Critical Essay by Peter Kemp
[The Flute Player is] a fantasy about art and totalitarianism. The setting for this is an unnamed, vaguely representative city where pogroms, purges and plagues are unleas...
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Critical Essay by Ron Kirke
It is only in the last few pages of this awkwardly impressive novel [The Flute Player] that the heroine, Elena, at some sort of peace at last, begins to play the flute. Bef...
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Critical Essay by Andrew Motion
By making the central character [of Birthstone] a split personality [D. M. Thomas] attaches his book to a long line of doppelgänger fictions, and thereby applies...
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Critical Essay by SeÁn Wyse Jackson
Around [the] unpromising hokum [of the plot in Birthstone], D.M. Thomas weaves a tale full of symbolic and lyrical poetry—he is, after all, primarily ...
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Critical Essay by Dick Davis
There is nothing underwritten about D. M. Thomas's new book of poems [Dreaming in Bronze]; many of them are vigorous monologues by the neurotic and obsessed. Mr Tho...
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Critical Essay by George Kearns
[In Ararat, D. M. Thomas attempts a balancing act somewhat like Umberto Eco's in The Name of the Rose]: on the one hand the book is loaded with Significance; on ...
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Critical Essay by John Bemrose
Swallow picks up where Ararat left off. Once again [Thomas] confronts his readers with the indefatigable Russian poet Rozanov, a womanizer with an extraordinary talent f...
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Critical Essay by Alasdair D. F. Macrae
For some years [Thomas's] poetry was best known for a science fiction element but his collection The Honeymoon Voyage (1978 …) displayed a wide ra...
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Critical Essay by Booklist
[Thomas] considers himself primarily a poet, even in his fiction, which shares with his verse a preoccupation, or rather, an obsession, with sex and death. [In Selected Poem...
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Critical Essay by Publishers Weekly
Thomas's poems are condensed narratives in much the same way that his prose is a logical extension of years of immersion in the poetic form. He is an unusual...
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Critical Essay by Anne Tyler
It's not really necessary, of course, for a reviewer to make the plot entirely clear to prospective readers. But in Ararat, the whole point is the plot—its d...
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