Biographies & Memoirs

Chaucer's Tale: 1386 and the Road to Canterbury

Chaucer's Tale: 1386 and the Road to Canterbury

A lively microbiography of Chaucer that tells the story of the tumultuous year that led to the creation of The Canterbury Tales

In 1386, Geoffrey Chaucer endured his worst year, but began his best poem. The father of English literature did not enjoy in his lifetime the literary celebrity that he has today—far from it. The middle-aged Chaucer was living in London, working as a midlevel bureaucrat and sometime poet, until a personal and professional crisis set him down the road leading to The Canterbury Tales.

In the politically and economically fraught London of the late fourteenth century, Chaucer was swept up against his will in a series of disastrous events that would ultimately leave him jobless, homeless, separated from his wife, exiled from his city, and isolated in the countryside of Kent—with no more audience to hear the poetry he labored over.

At the loneliest time of his life, Chaucer made the revolutionary decision to keep writing, and to write for a national audience, for posterity, and for fame.

Brought expertly to life by Paul Strohm, this is the eye-opening story of the birth one of the most celebrated literary creations of the English language.

Map of Chaucer's London

Introduction: Chaucer’s Crisis

Chapter 1: A Married Man

Chapter 2: Aldgate

Chapter 3: The Wool Men

Chapter 4: In Parliament

Chapter 5: The Other Chaucer

Chapter 6: The Problem of Fame

Chapter 7: Kent and Canterbury

Epilogue: Laureate Chaucer

Photographs

NOTES AND FURTHER READING

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