Loving, Hating, Living, and Transcending the Canon in “Either/Or” – Chicago Review of Books

Loving, Hating, Living, and Transcending the Canon in “Either/Or” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “Generous reading” is an approach to ideas that was in vogue among my friends in college. In brief, its precepts demand that new and even disagreeable arguments be afforded as much credence as possible. One could be critical only after deeply entertaining the worldview presented, suspending disbelief beyond the confines of fiction. But when … Read more

From the Omniscient to the Mundane in “The Books of Jacob” – Chicago Review of Books

From the Omniscient to the Mundane in “The Books of Jacob” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The first striking feature of The Books of Jacob—the latest book from Olga Tokarczuk and translated from the Polish by Jennifer Croft—is its length. The review copy I was mailed flopped around awkwardly in my hands in a manner reminiscent of a fish’s corpse; for the months that I carried it around, I felt … Read more

Politics after Populism and Pandemic” – Chicago Review of Books

Politics after Populism and Pandemic” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In 2000, a hefty treatise, tagged with the bold red title Empire and illustrated with a stock image of the planet from satellite’s view, quickly attracted interest from academics and popular audiences alike. The cover, with its primitive Y2K design, gave the book the aura of a revolutionary political pamphlet—one, though, that was almost … Read more

A Ruse Against Death in “Zabor or The Psalms” – Chicago Review of Books

A Ruse Against Death in “Zabor or The Psalms” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Writing about writing and telling stories about stories — these kinds of narratives can feel circularly post-modern. But, as it turns out, they are actually quite conventional and ancient. Homer’s The Odyssey, the vaunted paterfamilias of storytelling in the West, is an epic whose hero’s primary genius is not as a warrior or leader, … Read more