thelanabear 's review for:

Four Quartets by T.S. Eliot
3.0

Sure he was revolutionary at his time. But in a pseudo-intellectual way, which is not accessible today and could not have been in its time. It reads more as a middle-aged mans rambles of what could be, rather than being a book to provoke activism.

It was a good seed, but now many film-makers have improved on the themes of anti-corporation drudgery, and inward search and dreary worlds. I suppose first works are never the definitive of its genre.