Geoffrey Chaucer
Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1342/43–1400) was an English poet, writer, and civil servant best known for his masterpiece The Canterbury Tales, a collection of 24 stories told by pilgrims traveling to Canterbury. Called the 'father of English literature,' he was the outstanding English poet before William Shakespeare and the first writer to be buried in Poets' Corner at Westminster Abbey.
London, England
Wikipedia
poetry
narrative fiction
literary fiction
Chanticleer and the Fox
The Canterbury Tales
Chanticleer and the Fox
The Canterbury Tales (original-spelling Middle English edition) (Penguin Classics)
The Canterbury Tales
Troilus and Criseyde
The Canterbury Tales (original-spelling Middle English edition) (Penguin Classics)
The Canterbury Tales
The Canterbury Tales: Fifteen Tales and the General Prologue
The Canterbury Tales (Modern Library)
The Portable Chaucer: Revised Edition (Portable Library)
The Canterbury Tales
Troilus and Criseyde
The Canterbury Tales
The Selected Canterbury Tales: A New Verse Translation
Canterbury Tales, The, Level 3, Penguin Readers
The Canterbury Tales
The Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer's the Pardoner's Tale (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)
The Canterbury Tales
Complete Canterbury Tales: Slip-cased Edition
The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer: Edited From Numerous Manuscripts by Walter W. Skeat
The Friar'S, Summoner'S, and Pardoner's Tales from the Canterbury Tales (Medieval and Renaissance Texts)
Troilus and Criseyde