

Lewalski’s edition respects Milton’s original poem and offers supremely clear introductions, bibliography and special material to guide the student reader and educated lay person alike to new discoveries in a work that, quite simply, has it all: good, evil, God, Satan, humans, angels, love, despair, war, politics, sex, duty, and sublime poetry-set in a cosmic landscape that inspires wonder and seduces new readers in every generation." Its annotation is crisp, purposeful and well-judged." "For the student or general reader, looking for an old-spelling edition that is faithful to the original punctuation, this edition has much to recommend it. "Teachers and scholars will welcome Barbara Lewalski’s Blackwell edition of Paradise Lost, one not only informed by the erudition of a prominent and highly respected Miltonist but advantaged by her sound decision to reproduce the original language, spelling, punctuation, capitalization, and italics of the 1674 text." –Gordon Campbell, University of Leicester This is an edition that will please students and professors alike, and its sheer quality is a tribute to Barbara Lewalski's passion to provide readers with all the help they need to understand the greatest of all English poems." In this exemplary edition of Paradise Lost both qualities are in evidence: the text is scrupulous and the scholarship rigorous, but both the introduction and the notes are accommodated to the needs of students who will be coming to the poem for the first time. "Barbara Lewalski is the doyenne of the community of Milton scholars, but she also remains committed to the enterprise of teaching. Leslie Brisman, Department of English, Yale University This is a superb edition, a model of careful editing and judicious annotation. His introduction, a model of theoretically informed, politically committed, historically grounded criticism, makes this edition of Paradise Lost all you would expect from one of the most erudite and perceptive figures in the field. Kastan is an exemplary editor, attuned to emerging critical currents, yet steeped in the scholarship of an earlier tradition, aware of the text's provenance and reception, alert to its topicality.


Patrick Cheney, Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 Kastan's prose is not just lively but chiseled, and it is destined to affect students. Students and scholars alike will appreciate the balanced approach to the complexities, difficulties, and conundrums of Milton's poem and the criticism on it. N exemplary job both of presenting the major topics of Paradise Lost and of entering the selva oscura of Milton criticism. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery. This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers.
