In some superbly original chapters, crafted with the attunement to verbal detail of a practising poet, [Chaudhuri] shows that Lawrence's poems are less framed and finished products than fragments of a larger discourse.
Terry Eagleton, London Review of Books
. . . genuinely groundbreaking and exciting . . . This is a poet's criticism, shrewd and deft, full of inside knowledge and technical know-how.
Terry Eagleton, London Review of Books
D. H. Lawrence and 'Difference' is probably the single best study of Lawrence's poetry to date
Terry Eagleton, London Review of Books
Through the sheer cumulative force of its carefully nuanced readings, Amit Chaudhuri's argument is wholly convincing.
Anne Fernihough, Times Literary Supplement
The book forces us to rethink Lawrence's relationship to the larger questions of Modernism, class, Englishness, Western civilization, and Literature as a whole.
Anne Fernihough, Times Literary Supplement
One gets the sense, on reading this study, of someone actually reading Lawrence rather than looking for, and finding, what they expect to find. Instead of bringing pre-formed moral and critical prejudices to bear on his reading, Chaudhuri develops a theoretical framework to accommodate his extraordinary data.
Anne Fernihough, Times Literary Supplement
Chaudhuri is excellent on Lawrence's encounter with non-European cultures, as in Mornings in Mexico, but also on simplistic attempts to recuperate him as the noble savage of modernism.
David Wheatley, Irish Times
D.H. Lawrence and Difference succeeds in making us appreciate how much more there is to Lawrence than we know or think we know.
David Wheatley, Irish Times