Paradise Lost

A Biography

Alan Jacobs author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Princeton University Press

Published:29th Jul '25

Should be back in stock very soon

Paradise Lost cover

The life and times of Milton’s epic poem about Satan’s revolt against God and humanity’s expulsion from paradise

John Milton’s Paradise Lost has secured its place in the pantheon of epic poems, but unlike almost all other works in the pantheon, it is intimately associated with religious doctrine and its implications for how we live our lives. For more than three centuries, it has been a flashpoint for arguments not just about Christianity but also about governance, rebellion and obedience, sexual politics, and what makes poetry great. Alan Jacobs tells the story of Milton’s enduring poem, shedding light on its composition and reception and explaining why it resonates so powerfully with us today.

Composed through dictation after Milton went blind in 1652, Paradise Lost centers on an ancient biblical answer to the eternal question of how evil came into the world. It has proved impossible to disentangle the defense or critique of the poem from attitudes toward Christianity itself. Does Christian theology entail monarchy or democracy? Are relations between the sexes thwarted by pompous and tyrannical men or by vain and disobedient women? Jacobs traces how generations of readers have grappled with these and other questions, along the way revealing how Milton’s poem influenced novelists like Mary Shelley and Philip Pullman and has served as the inspiration for paintings, operas, comic books, and video games.

An essential companion to Milton’s poetic masterpiece, this book shows why Paradise Lost continues to serve as a mirror reflecting our own complex attitudes about power and authority, justice and revolt, and sin and salvation.

"A concise, lively and learned account of the poem’s creation and reception."---Dana Gioia, Wall Street Journal
"A concise summary of Paradise Lost as a work of theological and social inquiry, together with its literary impact." * Kirkus Reviews *
"Excellent. . . . The reader comes away from Jacobs’s short, stimulating volume with a sense of how thoroughly Milton realized his ambition that he ‘might perhaps leave something so written to after times, as they should not willingly let it die.’"---Katherine Howell, National Review
"A relaxed and engaging introduction to John Milton’s classic poem."---Terry Potter, Letterpress Project
"However many people may dislike Milton, however many may dislike as well his religious beliefs, we still have to face up to the fact that Paradise Lost was a monument of English literature, and this is what Jacobs does with polished insight and adroitness."---Peter Costello, The Irish Catholic

ISBN: 9780691238579

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

224 pages