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Siegfried Sassoon

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Although it is said that he owed his poetic vision to his Sephardic Jewish roots, Siegfried Sassoon was, in many ways, a conventionally Edwardian squire. And although near-suicidal bravery won him the Military Cross (Sassoon was famously fictionalized in Pat Barker’s Regeneration trilogy), his poetry shattered the ideals of wartime heroism. A gifted poet who refused to become part of any literary movement, his friendships ranged from Thomas Hardy and Robert Graves to the Sitwells, Rupert Brooke, and T.E. Lawrence. In this acclaimed biography, John Stuart Roberts skillfully chronicles Sassoon’s life and work, including his homosexuality, his marriage, and his quest for a personal religious faith. His inner journey to Catholicism in his final years is charted with a sensitivity and authority that are the hallmarks of this masterly portrait.

384 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2000

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John Stuart Roberts

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Stuart Goodwin.
36 reviews1 follower
June 17, 2013
Just finished this wonderful biography of Sassoon. Found him both an intriguing and a very sympathetic character. Very much the Virgoan hermit who needed absolute isolation in which to produce his work. I will shortly be playing Sassoon in a West End Show so this biography offered much-needed information. Great stuff.
5 reviews1 follower
January 25, 2014
Want to read a better/different biography - pre-ordered a new one on Amazon for May. Wish I were a better poetry-reader . . . but Sassoon is "readable."

I felt Roberts skipped too quickly over Sassoon's World War I experiences, but I did appreciate frequent references to Dr. Rivers and Sassoon's attachment to and appreciation for him (see Pat Barker's brilliant "Regeneration").

Next: a Rivers biography (if I can find one).

Profile Image for Randy Jasmine.
40 reviews
May 14, 2025
This was a very entertaining and informative biography, a combination that is difficult to achieve. Roberts was greatly aided by the fact that Sassoon had been an avid journal and letter writer for almost his entire life. Roberts is able to compassionately reveal SS's difficulty in finding personal happiness after the war that turned him into an internationally known figure. We find that Sassoon is aware of his homosexuality from a remarkably early point in his life, but he can never find fulfilling and lasting relationships due to both conservative societal norms and his own complex personality. I give Roberts credit for not falling into the trap of nostalgia and sentimentality while writing the life story of a poet and author who himself was unwaveringly nostalgic and sentimental in his postwar writing.
54 reviews
May 13, 2020
I found this sympathetic and well researched biography of the much loved poet, to be both moving and intelligently written. In many ways a tragic figure who was profoundly damaged by his experiences and losses in the trenches of WWI, Sassoon was one of the most renowned and feted War Poets, who tragically went out of fashion with the emergence of more intellectual modern poets and writers such as MacNeice, Eliot, Huxley and many more. Despite his very popular and successful Sherston trilogy, Sassoon is largely associated with his war poetry and a bygone and irretrievable era.
Profile Image for Stephen Robert Kuta.
Author 16 books33 followers
January 16, 2026
An incredible and interesting read, Sassoon was definitely a multilayered character, with a good heart but also deeply affected by his own tribulations.
I see some reflection in Siegfried as I do myself, In the way he can read and perceive other people. He was definitely a private man, more so in older age and if the last paragraph is correct, he seems to have passed away in good humour, one last joke from a friend that made him smile.
Profile Image for Hayley.
102 reviews
April 12, 2013
Back in college I studied Sassoon's poetry as part of a unit on war. I was really interested to find out more about the man behind the poems. This was a really comprehensive biography charting his entire life. Although it was interesting to find out about his later years I would have liked much more detail on WW 1 and particularly his time spent at Craiglockhart. What this book has made me want to do is revisit Regeneration by Pat Barker to now compare her fictionalized account of that time with the biography. I am also interested in reading some of his works of prose/autobiography.
Profile Image for Jamie Masq.
6 reviews
September 10, 2013
A very intriguing man with a character that shows more emotion in his journals and to others, than we show others today. A great read and nicely put together by the author, with a nice easy flow to reading. I thought it would be more consistent with modern celebrity biographies where they jump from year to year without much thought, but it wasn't. I was pleasantly surprised and enjoyed the story behind the man whilst loving to read his own snippets of text. I'd love to read his journals!
Profile Image for Nion.
25 reviews5 followers
October 10, 2019
果然还是一战那段最好看,后面被一堆狗血恋爱剧和家务事逼得近乎偏执,看得我要摔书(靠着看SS的蛤蟆先生式开车挺过来了!) 支持工人运动似乎也是半吊子= = RG为什么总是如此喜感......感觉SS是个比较被动的人,一战让他脱颖而出成为一颗光彩夺目的彗星,但和平年代仅靠他自己的时候,就会找不到创作方向,迷失在过去的生活里。真遗憾他后来和儿子也不亲近,晚年只能去宗教里寻找安慰太落寞了。
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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