Starry Nights image

Starry Nights (Paperback)

by Shobhaa De

TK. 630 Total: TK. 473

(You Saved TK. 157)
  • Look inside image 1
  • Look inside image 2
  • Look inside image 3
  • Look inside image 4
  • Look inside image 5
  • Look inside image 6
  • Look inside image 7
  • Look inside image 8
  • Look inside image 9
  • Look inside image 10
Starry Nights

Starry Nights (Paperback)

17 Ratings  |  No Review
TK. 630 TK. 473 You Save TK. 157 (25%)
in-stock icon In Stock (only 8 copies left)

* স্টক আউট হওয়ার আগেই অর্ডার করুন

কমিয়ে দেখুন
tag_icon

৫-১৬ এপ্রিল বেস্টসেলার বইয়ে ২৫% ছাড় ও অ্যাপ অর্ডারে এক্সট্রা ৩% ছাড়!

book-icon

বই হাতে পেয়ে মূল্য পরিশোধের সুযোগ

mponey-icon

৭ দিনের মধ্যে পরিবর্তনের সুযোগ

রকমারি বই-শাখি অফার! image

Frequently Bought Together

Starry Nights image

Starry Nights

TK. 630 TK. 473

plus icon plus icon equal icon
Total Amount: TK. 2181

Save TK. 157

Customers Also Bought

Product Specification & Summary

'Starry Nights' Summary of the book
“The Starry Night” shows Sexton’s identification with another tortured and suicidal artist, Vincent van Gogh. The short, free-verse poem begins with an epigraph from one of van Gogh’s letters to his brother. “That does not keep me from having a terrible need of—shall I say the word—religion,” van Gogh wrote. “Then I go out at night to paint the stars.” Sexton used epigraphs from a variety of works to begin her poems, and the epigraphs are often of major importance, pointing to a main theme of the poem that might otherwise be overlooked. Here she is indicating that she shares not only the mental imbalance, suicidal tendencies, and artistic nature of the Dutch artist but also his unsatisfied desire for the spiritual.
When van Gogh wrote the letter to his brother, he was painting the masterpiece Starry Night on the Rhone, which is described in the poem. The painting captures the night sky in blues and blacks, with a swirl of violent orange representing the moon, and burning yellow-white stars. One would expect a peaceful scene from the title, but this painting is intensely disquieting. The movement seems to be a great rush skyward, the sleeping town beneath the sky unconscious of this spiraling of all nature toward infinity. Sexton sees this painting as a reflection of her own death wish. The dark tree at the edge of the painting is described as “black-haired”—Sexton was a brunette—and it “slips/ up like a drowned woman into the hot sky.” To make her meaning clearer, she continues, “This is how/ I want to die.”
The poem interprets the painting as presenting a nature that is animate and hostile. Nevertheless, the picture attracts the speaker, because nature’s brute force promises death, release from the burden of self. Sexton sees the central moon image in the painting as a great dragon that will suck her up into its being. She desires, she says, “to split/ from my life with no flag,/ no belly,/ no cry”—to merge silently and painlessly with the infinite. The images may suggest not a rediscovery of religion but a terrifying substitute for it. Part of the appeal of this poem lies in the vivid interpretation of the painting and in the kinship the reader sees between Sexton and van Gogh.
Title Starry Nights
Author
Publisher
ISBN 9780143421313
Edition 1st Edition, 2013
Number of Pages 315
Country India
Language English

Similar Category Best Selling Books

Related Products

Sponsored Products Related To This Item

Reviews and Ratings

4.35

17 Ratings and 0 Review

sort icon

Product Q/A

Have a question regarding the product? Ask Us

Show more Question(s)
prize book-reading point

Recently Sold Products

Recently Viewed
cash

Cash on delivery

Pay cash at your doorstep

service

Delivery

All over Bangladesh

return

Happy return

7 days return facility

0 Item(s)

Subtotal:

Customers Also Bought

Are you sure to remove this from book shelf?

Starry Nights