Copped at the ReUzeIt store despite the height of my to-read stack and despite the sticker price of 50 cents more than the original price. "Treasury" is an accurate word to describe this excellent collection of sonnets by poets from the 1530s to around the mid 20th century. I don't know anything about the editor or why Dover Thrift asked him to put together a book of great sonnets by great poets, but Negri has done a wonderful job. Poets are introduced in order of their year of birth, and each poet has a one-to-two-sentence biographical note including tidbits like what each brought to the sonnet form, what literary movement each belonged to, which poets were friends, and other similar data. Each poet is represented by one to four representative sonnets. Byron, we are told, was not fond of the format and wrote very few sonnets; Edna St Vincent Millay, on the other hand, was a prolific sonneteer. If you are, like Byron, a disainer of the sonnet form, maybe this book isn't for you, but actually, yes it is: if anything will bring you around to the form, it will be this book. I plan to reread this slim volume with a pen and pad to note down words I don't know, allusions I didn't get, and poets who bear further reading based on the quality of the selections in this book.