Epstein (former editor of American Scholar and author of Gossip: The
Untrivial Pursuit) brings an erudite gift for portraiture to the
subjects of this volume's 40 essays. Focused primarily on figures from
the 19th and 20th centuries (with occasional excursions into Greek
antiquity and colonial America), Epstein offers eloquent assessments of
philosophers, politicians, athletes, composers, social scientists, movie
stars, and especially writers and critics. He is particularly drawn to
figures whose renown is at odds with their personal and professional
shortcomings hence, his evaluation of Ralph Ellison, author of The
Invisible Man, as a writer whose inability to complete his second novel
for the next 42 years suggests that "perhaps it is not a good idea to
write a great book the first time out." His studies of Dwight Macdonald,
Gore Vidal, Irving Howe, Alfred Kazin, and Irving Kristol create a
lively, multifaceted portrait of America's postwar intelligentsia.
Though not uncritical, Epstein is more adulatory of celebrities, among
them George Gershwin ("a genius of the natural kind"), Irving Thalberg
("the most talented producer in the history of American movies"), and
Michael Jordan ("this magnificent athlete who turned his sport into
art"). Opinionated and sometimes personal (notably in his piece on Saul
Bellow, who fell out with him), these essays are edifying and often very
entertaining. Agent: Georges Borchardt Inc. (Oct.) Copyright 2012 Reed
Business Information. --Publishers Weekly
"So Many Books...So Little Time"
Some of the Library's newly-acquired books that have been highlighted on Colonie's Cable Channel 17 show called "So Many Books..So Little Time."
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