born Jan. 19, 1932, Shotts, Lanarkshire [now Strathclyde], Scot. died Feb. 16, 1992, Tuam, County Galway, Ire. British poet and novelist whose verse ranged from moving personal elegies, highly contrived poetic jokes, and loosely structured dream fantasies to macabre satires. MacBeth published his first collection of poetry, A Form of Words (1954), before he graduated from New College, Oxford (1955). By the end of the 1950s he was one of the leading talk-radio producers with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). He persuaded a wide variety of poets to read their own work on such programs as Poet's Voice (195865; renamed Poetry Now, 196576) and New Comment (195964). He quit the BBC in 1976, shortly after the publication of his first two novels, The Transformation and The Samurai (both in 1975). Although his second verse collection, The Broken Places, did not appear until 1963, from 1965 he published at least one volume of poetryincluding The Colour of Blood (1967), Shrapnel (1973), Poems of Love and Death (1980), Anatomy of a Divorce (1988), and Trespassing (1991)almost every year. He also wrote children's verse, edited poetry anthologies, and wrote several more novels, notably Anna's Book (1983) and Another Love Story (1991). His last novel, The Testament of Spencer, was published posthumously in 1992.
MACBETH, GEORGE MANN
Meaning of MACBETH, GEORGE MANN in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012