Geoffrey Hill, the son of a police constable, was born in Worcestershire in 1932. He was educated at Bromsgrove County High School and at Keble College, Oxford. After teaching for more than thirty years in England, first at Leeds and subsequently at Cambridge, he became Professor of Literature and Religion at Boston University in Massachusetts, where he was also founding co-director of the Editorial Institute. In 2010 he was elected Professor of Poetry at the University of Oxford. Kenneth Haynes is Professor of Comparative Literature and Classics at Brown University.
The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin resists classification. It is a magnificent conclusion to his oeuvre, and will, I'm sure, be seen by future critics as a key text of our troubled times. * Shiny New Books * Certainly nothing for those who want their verse accessible and familiar, but for anyone open to this sort of thing The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin is a fascinating (and occasionally daunting-to-maddening) treasure trove. * M.A.Orthofer, Complete Review * If you know and like Hill, this volume is clearly a must. * Brian McClorry SJ, Thinking Faith * [The Book of Baruch] was composed in the last few years and months of Hill's life and its faithful editing by Kenneth Haynes is itself a remarkable work of scholarship. * Jeffrey Wainwright, PN Review * The book was probably never meant to be finished - it's a scrapheap he might have added to for years, scraping, fine-tuning, revising in eternal contention with the world, with himself ... The whole is riveting and a little mad, laid out in mouse print like an interminable sonata of footnotes. * William Logan, New Criterion * This posthumous collection ... embodies a controversial but impassioned idea of what poetry is and does. It deserves our respectful, careful attention. * David Womersley, Standpoint * Hill has been very well served by the excellent Kenneth Haynes, who saw both his prose and his poetry into the magnificence of their Oxford editions while Hill was alive, and who now brings this final posthumous poem to press. * Seamus Perry, London Review of Books * In its passion and clarity, The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin will be gratefully received by those who find Hill's earlier work his most affecting ... and in addition [it has] a good deal of the grandeur (and less of the grandiosity) of his later work ... But in its sheer abundance, as well as its manifold beauties and rigorous interrogations, the book can only confirm our sense of the magnitude of his achievement. * Andrew Motion, Times Literary Supplement * It is among his greatest work. * Nicholas Lezard, The Spectator * The Book of Baruch is, without doubt, one of the most extraordinary books of the Brexit era. * Jeremy Noel-Todd, The Sunday Times * remarkable testamentary volume... There is scarcely one of the 271 sections in this book that does not assail the reader with the force of a vatic last judgment... The Book of Baruch is a work of the sovereign imagination * David Wheatley, The Guardian * The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin [...] reads as if John Milton had joined forces with John Berryman to engage in a passionate diatribe-cum-elegy on the state of the nation and the state of poetry, not without reference to Brexit, the Blitz and Hill's own imminent demise. An unacknowledged legislator for our time? You bet. * Harry Eyres, The Tablet, Books of the Year 2019 * A wonderful combination of visionary genius, cross old git, and lyric majesty ... Crammed with interest. Disturbing. Infuriating and sometimes pretentious nonsense. There is no doubting Hill's greatness. Helas! * A.N. Wilson, The Church Times, Books of the Year 2019 * Selected as a 2019 Book of the Year in The Times Literary Supplement Relentlessly quotable. * Tristram Fane Saunders, The Daily Telegraph, Books of the Year 2019 * [Geoffrey Hill's] final testimony, The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin, still felt timely in its tintinnabulous quarrelling with post-imperial Britain. It is not the place to start with Hill's work, but it was a barnstorming last bow. * Jeremy Noel-Todd, The Sunday Times, Books of the Year 2019 *