Eight letters that John Keats penned to his fiancée before his untimely death are “the literary find of a lifetime” ...
The eight letters by the 19th-century Romantic poet to his fiancée, Fanny Brawne, were taken decades ago from a Whitney ...
Romantic poet’s letters to Fanny Brawne, dated between 1819 and 1820, had been stolen from a Long Island estate ...
A trove of rare books and letters by literary legends like James Joyce, John Keats and Oscar Wilde — worth more than $3 ...
Nearly 40 years ago, a book containing eight letters John Keats wrote to his fiancee Fanny Brawne disappeared. They resurfaced last year and, this week, returned to their rightful owner.
Two centuries after John Keats first put pen to paper to proclaim his love for his fiancée Fanny Brawne, blotted notes of the ...
If the poet John Keats—fresh, fainting, convulsed by illness for much of his short life—could speak to us from beyond the grave, what would he say? More to the point, how would he say it? Keats didn’t ...
Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. When I read John Keats's poetry in high school and college, I had a particularly vivid picture of the poet: pale and ...
No publication on Keats could be more acceptable just now than a complete edition of his letters. It was high time for someone to include in a definitive edition the correspondence discovered in ...
A little over a third of the way into Paul Kerschen’s debut historical novel, “The Warm South,” a character asks poet John Keats, “But you must know Mrs. Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein’?” As everyone today ...
The agonies of John Keats's final months in Rome were partly the result of his doctor's misdiagnoses, according to a new biography. When the poet arrived in Rome from London in November of 1820, Dr ...