William Blake & The Sea Monsters of Love: How one visionary inspired two hundred years of art, poetry & protest: Unabridged edition

By Philip Hoare

‘A great artist of whom almost nobody had heard’

A new strange and alluring book on the reverberating influence of William Blake, from the award-winning author of Leviathan and Albert and the Whale

Weaving together fragments of artists’ stories across time and place, Philip Hoare embarks on a Sebaldian exploration of the enduring legacy of William Blake. A poet, painter and printmaker who was unappreciated and considered mad in his own time, Blake was eventually lauded as a key pillar of the Romantic movement. His posthumous influence reverberates endlessly, from the films of Derek Jarman to our ongoing fear of technological advancement.

With Blake occupying the narrative centre as a visionary and mythical inspiration, we discover the interconnectedness of artists and writers who came after him, including Paul Nash, Oscar Wilde, Francis Bacon, David Bowie and many more. Snaking around the intersections of history, memoir and art, Hoare looks to the sea while drawing a line from one figure to another, tracing their relationships to the natural world while always returning to the haunting genius of William Blake.

Format: Audio-Book
Release Date: 13 Feb 2025
Pages: None
ISBN: 978-0-00-853437-0
Detailed Edition: Unabridged edition
Philip Hoare is the author of seven works of non-fiction, including Leviathan or, The Whale, which won the 2009 Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction. Hoare is also an experienced broadcaster, a Visiting Fellow at Southampton University, and Leverhulme Artist-in-residence at The Marine Institute, Plymouth University, which awarded him an honourary doctorate in 2011. He lives in Southampton.

Praise for Philip Hoare: -

”'Always original … Always pushing from somewhere new” - Olivia Laing

”'Hoare writes with a beautiful and liquid assurance, luxuriantly at home in this half-modernist, half-conventional medium and capable of astonishingly realised visions of floating moments and sea encounters” - Adam Nicholson