Oscar Wilde Books


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->W-->Wilde, Oscar-->9
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Oscar Wilde Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

 Oscar Wilde
Perverse Midrash: Oscar Wilde, Andre Gide, And Censorship Of Biblical Drama
Published in Paperback by Continuum International Publishing Group (2004-11-30)
Author: Katherine Brown Downey
List price: $29.95
New price: $3.98
Used price: $3.01
Collectible price: $119.98

Average review score:

Brilliant scholar
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-24
Dr. Downey confronts the little-understood censorship of Biblical drama that continued into the twentieth century. She has done immense research and synthesized it well. Read her book!

 Oscar Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Published in Paperback by Norilana Books (2007-02-10)
Author: Oscar Wilde
List price: $7.95
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Average review score:

one of the great psychological novels
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-03
This is one of the greatest stories ever of the struggle and torment between good and evil, between animal versus spiritual influences that resides within our mind and soul . An absolute masterpiece. A more modern version of Dante's inferno.

 Oscar Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray (Classics)
Published in Paperback by Bantam USA (1983-06)
Author: Oscar Wilde
List price: $2.95
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Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

A Classic Story....
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-06
I heard about the ending in this book by a popular speaker who I've enjoyed over the years, and the ending intrigued me enough that I wanted to read the book as well.

The story centers on the life of Dorian Gray, who's wish to have his painted portrait age and show signs of moral decay instead of his body comes true. Throughout his life he becomes more and more heinous morally, while retaining his innocent look until his death, which is the suprise ending...

Also included in this book are the short stories 'Lord Aurthur Savile's Crime,' 'The Canterville Ghost,' 'The Sphinx Without a Secret,' and 'The Model Millionare.'

 Oscar Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray (Collector's Library)
Published in Hardcover by CRW Publishing Limited (2003-09-01)
Author: Oscar Wilde
List price: $12.40
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Average review score:

"Beauty is a form of Genius."
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-06
Oscar Wilde was one of the foremost representatives of Aestheticism, a movement based on the notion that art exists for no other purpose than its existence itself ("l'art pour l'art"), not for the purpose of social and moral enlightenment. Born in Dublin and a graduate of Oxford's Magdalen College, he initially worked primarily as a journalist, editor and lecturer, but gradually turned to writing and produced his most acclaimed works in the six-year span from 1890 to 1895, roughly coinciding with the period of his romantic involvement with Lord Alfred "Bosie" Douglas, sixteen years his junior. Douglas's strained relationship with his father, John Sholto Douglas, Marquees of Queensberry, eventually resulted in a series of confrontations between Wilde and the Marquees, which first led to a libel suit brought by Wilde against his lover's father (who had openly accused Wilde of "posing as a sodomite" and threatened to disown his son if he didn't give up his acquaintance with the writer) and subsequently to two criminal trials against Wilde for "gross indecencies," based on a law generally interpreted to prohibit homosexual relationships. Sentenced to a two-year term of "hard labor" in Reading Gaol, Wilde emerged from prison in 1897 a spiritually, physically and financially broken man and, unable to continue living in England or Ireland, after three years' wanderings throughout Europe died in 1900 of cerebral meningitis, barely 46 years old.

"The Picture of Dorian Gray," Wilde's only novel besides seven plays as well as several works of short fiction, poetry, nonfiction and two fairy tale collections originally written for his two sons, is critical to an understanding of Wilde's body of work and his personality primarily for two reasons: First, because it constitutes one of his earliest fully accomplished formulations of Aestheticism, and secondly because of its undeniable undercurrent of homoeroticism; an inclination which, after a six-year marriage widely thought to initially have been a true love match, Wilde had begun to explore more openly around the time of the novel's creation (1890). The story's title character is an exceptionally handsome young man who, both in the eyes of the artist tasked to paint his portrait, Basil Hallward, and in those of their somewhat older friend Lord Henry Wotton, epitomizes perfect beauty and is coveted by both men for that very reason. Seduced by hedonistic Lord Henry into believing that beauty can literally justify anything, including any act of immorality, Dorian sells his soul for maintaining his beautiful appearance, letting his portrait age in his stead. (In that, his character resembles Goethe's and Marlowe's Faust.) He then quickly turns from an innocent youth into a cruel and calculating man whom society, in its shallow adherence to appearances, nonetheless never associates with any of the results of his cruelty, never looking beyond the surface of his handsome exterior and assuming that a man so beautiful must necessarily also be good. Ultimately it is Dorian himself who brings about his own downfall when he is no longer able to face the manifestation of his evilness in Basil Hallward's picture.

Upon its initial publication in Lippincott's Monthly Magazine in 1890, "The Picture of Dorian Gray" was widely scorned as immoral by a public neither familiar with nor particularly open to the concepts of Aestheticism and its mockery of middle class morality, and repulsed by the thinly veiled homoerotic relationship of the novel's protagonists. Wilde republished the work the following year, adding a preface designed to explain his views on art. Yet, it was that preface which, along with several of his other publications and his written exchanges with Lord Alfred Douglas, ultimately would play a devastating role in his trials, where Queensberry's attorney would come to use an excerpt from that very preface -- "There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written" -- to extract from Wilde statements to the effect that any book inspiring a sense of beauty (including, as implied in the attorney's question, an "immoral" book, if "The Picture of Dorian Gray" could be qualified as such) was well-written and therefore commendable; that only Philistines, brutes and illiterates -- whose views on art he considered invariably stupid and for which he therefore didn't "care twopence" -- could consider this novel "perverted," and that the majority of the reading public would probably not be able to draw a proper distinction between a good and a bad book. It was testimony such as this, as well as the impending confrontation with a number of male witnesses ready to testify as to the nature of their relationship with Wilde, that not only caused the author's attorney to convince his client to drop the libel suit against Queensberry but also opened the door for Wilde's own subsequent prosecution.

If "The Picture of Dorian Gray" has a central theme besides the supremacy of beauty and the depiction of a society primarily interested in appearances, it is a call for individuality: Dorian's cruelty is brought out only after he allows himself to be influenced by Lord Henry's equally seductive and cynical hedonism; and similarly, Basil Hallward's blind idolizing of Dorian eventually proves fatal for the painter. -- Wilde's only novel is one of the first and most poignant expressions of his own individualism; but unlike his protagonist, who ultimately pays a ghastly prize for selling his soul and giving up his individuality, Wilde paid as high a price for maintaining his. Like Dorian, he knew that "[e]ach of us has Heaven and Hell in him," and although this novel's preface ends with the provocative statement that "[a]ll art is quite useless," it was the very fact that Wilde put his entire being into his art that ultimately destroyed him. But like beauty, which is finally restored to perfection in Dorian Gray's portrait, Wilde's works have stood the test of time; and not merely for their countless, pricelessly witty epigrams. They're as well worth a read as ever.

Also recommended:
Complete Works of Oscar Wilde (Collins Classics)
Oscar Wilde
Wilde (Special Edition)
The Oscar Wilde Collection
The Picture of Dorian Gray
The Importance of Being Earnest - Criterion Collection
The Importance of Being Earnest
An Ideal Husband
A Good Woman

 Oscar Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray (Oxford World's Classics)
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press, USA (2008-06-15)
Author: Oscar Wilde
List price: $7.95
New price: $4.29
Used price: $4.48

Average review score:

Beauty Is a Form of Genius.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-09
Oscar Wilde was one of the foremost representatives of Aestheticism, a movement based on the notion that art exists for no other purpose than its existence itself ("l'art pour l'art"), not for the purpose of social and moral enlightenment. Born in Dublin and a graduate of Oxford's Magdalen College, he initially worked primarily as a journalist, editor and lecturer, but gradually turned to writing and produced his most acclaimed works in the six-year span from 1890 to 1895, roughly coinciding with the period of his romantic involvement with Lord Alfred "Bosie" Douglas, sixteen years his junior. Douglas's strained relationship with his father, John Sholto Douglas, Marquees of Queensberry, eventually resulted in a series of confrontations between Wilde and the Marquees, which first led to a libel suit brought by Wilde against his lover's father (who had openly accused Wilde of "posing as a sodomite" and threatened to disown his son if he didn't give up his acquaintance with the writer) and subsequently to two criminal trials against Wilde for "gross indecencies," based on a law generally interpreted to prohibit homosexual relationships. Sentenced to a two-year term of "hard labor" in Reading Gaol, Wilde emerged from prison in 1897 a spiritually, physically and financially broken man and, unable to continue living in England or Ireland, after three years' wanderings throughout Europe died in 1900 of cerebral meningitis, barely 46 years old.

"The Picture of Dorian Gray," Wilde's only novel besides seven plays as well as several works of short fiction, poetry, nonfiction and two fairy tale collections originally written for his two sons, is critical to an understanding of Wilde's body of work and his personality primarily for two reasons: First, because it constitutes one of his earliest fully accomplished formulations of Aestheticism, and secondly because of its undeniable undercurrent of homoeroticism; an inclination which, after a six-year marriage widely thought to initially have been a true love match, Wilde had begun to explore more openly around the time of the novel's creation (1890). The story's title character is an exceptionally handsome young man who, both in the eyes of the artist tasked to paint his portrait, Basil Hallward, and in those of their somewhat older friend Lord Henry Wotton, epitomizes perfect beauty and is coveted by both men for that very reason. Seduced by hedonistic Lord Henry into believing that beauty can literally justify anything, including any act of immorality, Dorian sells his soul for maintaining his beautiful appearance, letting his portrait age in his stead. (In that, his character resembles Goethe's and Marlowe's Faust.) He then quickly turns from an innocent youth into a cruel and calculating man whom society, in its shallow adherence to appearances, nonetheless never associates with any of the results of his cruelty, never looking beyond the surface of his handsome exterior and assuming that a man so beautiful must necessarily also be good. Ultimately it is Dorian himself who brings about his own downfall when he is no longer able to face the manifestation of his evilness in Basil Hallward's picture.

Upon its initial publication in Lippincott's Monthly Magazine in 1890, "The Picture of Dorian Gray" was widely scorned as immoral by a public neither familiar with nor particularly open to the concepts of Aestheticism and its mockery of middle class morality, and repulsed by the thinly veiled homoerotic relationship of the novel's protagonists. Wilde republished the work the following year, adding a preface designed to explain his views on art. Yet, it was that preface which, along with several of his other publications and his written exchanges with Lord Alfred Douglas, ultimately would play a devastating role in his trials, where Queensberry's attorney would come to use an excerpt from that very preface - "There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written" - to extract from Wilde statements to the effect that any book inspiring a sense of beauty (including, as implied in the attorney's question, an "immoral" book, if "The Picture of Dorian Gray" could be qualified as such) was well-written and therefore commendable; that only Philistines, brutes and illiterates - whose views on art he considered invariably stupid and for which he therefore didn't "care twopence" - could consider this novel "perverted," and that the majority of the reading public would probably not be able to draw a proper distinction between a good and a bad book. It was testimony such as this, as well as the impending confrontation with a number of male witnesses ready to testify as to the nature of their relationship with Wilde, that not only caused the author's attorney to convince his client to drop the libel suit against Queensberry but also opened the door for Wilde's own subsequent prosecution.

If "The Picture of Dorian Gray" has a central theme besides the supremacy of beauty and the depiction of a society primarily interested in appearances, it is a call for individuality: Dorian's cruelty is brought out only after he allows himself to be influenced by Lord Henry's equally seductive and cynical hedonism; and similarly, Basil Hallward's blind idolizing of Dorian eventually proves fatal for the painter. - Wilde's only novel is one of the first and most poignant expressions of his own individualism; but unlike his protagonist, who ultimately pays a ghastly prize for selling his soul and giving up his individuality, Wilde paid as high a price for maintaining his. Like Dorian, he knew that "[e]ach of us has Heaven and Hell in him," and although this novel's preface ends with the provocative statement that "[a]ll art is quite useless," it was the very fact that Wilde put his entire being into his art that ultimately destroyed him. But like beauty, which is finally restored to perfection in Dorian Gray's portrait, Wilde's works have stood the test of time; and not merely for their countless, pricelessly witty epigrams. They're as well worth a read as ever.

Also recommended:
Complete Works of Oscar Wilde (Collins Classics)
Oscar Wilde
Wilde (Special Edition)
The Oscar Wilde Collection
The Picture of Dorian Gray
The Importance of Being Earnest - Criterion Collection
The Importance of Being Earnest
An Ideal Husband
A Good Woman

 Oscar Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray and Other Tales
Published in Paperback by Lysander Press (2006-05-25)
Author: Oscar Wilde
List price: $17.99
New price: $12.01
Used price: $14.11

Average review score:

New Life for Gray
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-21
The latest work by Cyrus Rua is nothing short of Brilliant.
Rua shows his affinity for Wilde's work thru a very insightful representation of the imagery created throughout the book.
The artist breathes new life into the Picture of Dorian Gray. His haunting images are consistent with the tone of the story, but the artist doesn't overshadow the author. Rua's detailed depictions compliment Wilde's work like a fine wine with a good meal.
Cyrus Rua shows us various styles and mediums, but brings it together with graceful genius.

So, pick up a copy for yourself and a few close friends and relatives, and while you're at it order a copy Rua's "Grimmest of Grimm" if you don't already have one.
I, for one, anxiously await his future works.

 Oscar Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray: Elementary Level (Heinemann Guided Readers)
Published in Paperback by Delta Systems (1999-06)
Authors: Oscar Wilde and F.H. Cornish
List price: $4.08
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Average review score:

Excellent!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
This book is a great book that will introduce new English readers to classic literature. It's amazing how the original book can be condensed for new readers and yet remain so faithful to the spirit of the original work. Highly recommended.

 Oscar Wilde
Salome
Published in Hardcover by Book Collectors Association, inc ()
Author: Oscar Wilde
List price:
Used price: $30.25
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

EXCELLENT PRESENTATION OF THIS WILDE PLAY POORLY TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-15
At this inexpensive price this much sought for and cherished book deserves a space on your trophy-book shelf. Beautifully printed and preserved inside a black embossed box with doubled pages preventing bleed-through of the wonderful images and printing.

UNfortunately we may only appreciate this play truly in the original French WIlde wrote for Sarah Bernhardt: NOT FOR THE LATER ENGLISH TRANSLATOR who killed it - often we hear it was written for HIM, but it was written for Sarah as part of Wilde's ungoing campaign to reveal the hypocrisy, corruption callous violence and immorality of the BRitish self-proclaimed aristocracy.

Wilde as playwright was revolutionary and exposed the profound disease of the BRitish imperialists who had destroyed and sucked dry his nation of birth Ireland, where his parents were nationailists. Study this closely in the original, not in the stilted English translation by one of his stooges in that aristocracy. Or study my own excellent and living translation.

Unfortunately Berkoff's recorded staging of this play must ultimately disappoint.

And BEardsley never actually even read the play he was illustrating, yet the illustrations are his best known work today. UNfortunately (or otherwise) this present edition does not include the highly elaborate art-deco illustrations, so sinister and callous, by BEardsley, but a more simple and "naif" art-deco style by an Italian illustrator Valenti (please see my image for more careful adscription and sample illustrations of those presentable in public)

This edition is a great jewel in any case and one to acquire.

You are free to view mine if you wish. You will find it on my trophy bookshelf next to Coleridge, Dante and Homer. (I keep James Joyce in the bedroom)

 Oscar Wilde
Salome by Oscar Wilde with Illustrations by Aubrey Beardsley
Published in Kindle Edition by MobileReference (2008-04-29)
Authors: Oscar Wilde, MobileReference, and mobi
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Average review score:

a fascinating story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
Salome by Oscar Wilde with Illustrations by Aubrey Beardsley

The Kindle edition of Salome contains Aubrey Beardsley illustrations. A brilliant tale of passion; a very quick and interesting read.

 Oscar Wilde
Salome, A Tragedy in One Act
Published in Hardcover by New York: Heritage Press, 1945 (1945)
Author: Oscar Wilde
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Average review score:

Info
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-16
Salome: A Tragedy in One Act
Translated from the French of Oscar Wilde by Lord Alfred Douglas.
With a new introduction by Holbrook Jackson.
Beautifully decorated and hand-illuminated by Valenti Angelo for the Heritage Press, New York.
51 pages.
Copyright 1945.
Hardback book comes in slipcover.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->W-->Wilde, Oscar-->9
Related Subjects: Works Quotations
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250