
Crow
From the Life and Songs of the Crow
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Narrated by:
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Ted Hughes
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By:
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Ted Hughes
About this listen
From his remarkable debut The Hawk in the Rain (1957) to his death in 1998, Ted Hughes was a colossal presence in the English literary landscape. He was also admired as a performer of his own work.
Crow is one of his most significant collections, focusing on the central figure of the crow - predatory, mocking and indestructible. Crow is read here by the author in its entirety and with narrative links not included in the published text.
Ted Hughes (1930-1998) was born in Yorkshire. The Hawk in the Rain was published by Faber and Faber and was followed by many volumes of poetry and prose for adults and children, including Moortown Diary (1979). He received the Whitbread Book of the Year for both Tales from Ovid (1997) and Birthday Letters (1998). He was Poet Laureate from 1984, and in 1998 he was appointed to the Order of Merit.
©1970 Estate of Ted Hughes (P)1997 Faber AudioCritic reviews
Ted Hughes
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The woeful labours, lessons and trials of the crow are certainly nightmarish - touching upon the blood-mud of war and the most perverse underbelly of sex, the hostility of nature and the great joke of mankind – but rather than presenting them as looming ghoulies or fevered visions, Hughes’ telling of the story is oddly pleasing, often humorous and rather matter-of-fact in its account of such primordial frights.
Hughes’ keen eye for detail is all that elicits the horror of Crow, it is only that his subject – as so often across his ouvre – happens to carry death in its claws, screams in its mouth and traverses a prickly world of frankly hyper-realistic violence.
More than a horror story, Crow is a kind of religion. It takes the prime tale of Christianity and challenges it in an arena of some very ancient earth worship. Where God and Crow collide, mythology is forged. And it is a myth at once strange and unsettling and yet relevant, applicable even, scattered through with whimsical fables and shamanic songs to delight as well as provoke.
Some see Crow and Crow himself as a reaction to Hughes’ wife Sylvia Plath’s suicide but this is not a fair assessment. If the crow was some analogue for the Grim of her depression I doubt it would be quite so open, quite so transformative, quite so communicative(!) and if the black of its wings is an expression of grief then surely the work would have doubled in its ferocity after the death of Assia Wevvil and Shura rather than been cut short entirely. Crow was destined to rise up and win the day, it was circumstance which left the story in mourning.
The fact that Crow is a half-told tale, and a fluidly changed and edited one at that, lends to its mythic quality. It feels like part of the aural tradition and that is aided by this audio recording. Hughes’ asides, inserts, commentary and narration of the narrative on which these poems hang is an invaluable well of interest and holds the giddy joy of being let in on secrets whispered.
Stylistically, some might find the collection challenging on the page but here brought to life by the thunder rolls of the author’s voice, this is a book without equal. My only criticism ever of Crow was that it must be read in mine own voice and lose some of its power for it, but now that wrong is put right and Crow caws at full power once more.
Ted Hughes, the king of carrion
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‘There was no escape except into death’
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Masterpiece to Listen to and Read
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Hughes' narration is so good.
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Faber's Lazy Approach to Audiobook Production
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