Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained: Reader's Guide
By Joe Carlson
Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained: Reader’s Guide
$21.95
If English is your mother tongue, this is your epic poem.
For centuries, the enduring and indelible imagery of Paradise Lost has shaped our cultural consciousness of the treachery of Satan and the Fall of mankind. The soaring beauty of the language and the depth and complexity of the syntax establish Paradise Lost as an important classic that will be read for centuries to come. Equally important, though less frequently read, Paradise Regained brings the character arcs of both Satan and the Son to a triumphant and deeply satisfying finish. These two great epic poems offer rich insight into the nature of free will, sin, justice, holiness, rebellion, and redemption.
Join Joe Carlson, author of the Dante Curriculum, as he walks through each of the epics, offering summaries of the books, notes detailing various classical allusions and Scriptural references, analyses unpacking key moments in the story, and a handful of discussion questions for further contemplation. This guide will greatly enhance the reading of the poems, both for the first-time student and the life-long scholar.
Paradise Lost & Paradise Regained: Last of the Great Epics ix
What Makes an Epic… an Epic? xii
So, What Do I Do With an Epic Poem? xviii
How to Use This Reader Guide xxiii
Paradise Lost Reader’s Guide
Book I 5
Book II 23
Book III 33
Book IV 59
Book V 71
Book VI 83
Book VII 97
Book VIII 107
Book IX 117
Book X 133
Book XI 149
Book XII 165
Paradise Regained Reader’s Guide
Book I 187
Book II 199
Book III 217
Book IV 231
Further Resources
Biographical Sketch of John Milton by Nathan Haskell Dole 253
Title: Paradise Lost & Paradise Regained: Reader’s Guide Author: Joe Carlson Cover Design: Joey Nance, based off the work of Gustov Doré Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.5 x 0.667 inches Pages: 296 ISBN: 978-1-963505-12-2 (Paperback) Series: Roman Roads Classics / Reader’s Guides
Joe Carlson (PhD Literature) lives in Moscow, Idaho with his wife and son. He graduated from New Saint Andrews College with a BA in Liberal Arts in Culture, and from the University of Dallas with an MA in Humanities and a PhD in Literature. He has managed a chain of coffee shops, published (micro) epic poetry, co-pastored a church, co-founded a university campus ministry, and taught many different kinds of classes over the years. Currently, he is an adjunct lecturer at New Saint Andrews College, a humanities teacher with Logos Online School, and a curriculum developer at Roman Roads Press. He is the author of, among other things, the Dante Curriculum, which includes an original blank verse translation of the Divine Comedy, published by Roman Roads.