Waiting for the Barbarians · Essays From the Classics to Pop Culture (New York Review Collections)

Waiting for the Barbarians · Essays From the Classics to Pop Culture (New York Review Collections)
Authors
Mendelsohn, Daniel
Publisher
New York Review Books
Tags
writing
ISBN
9781590176092
Date
2012-10-16T00:00:00+00:00
Size
1.46 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 17 times

FINALIST FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD

AND THE PEN ART OF THE ESSAY AWARD

Over the past decade and a half, Daniel Mendelsohn’s reviews for  The New York Review of Books ,  The New Yorker , and  The New York Times Book Review  have earned him a reputation as “one of the greatest critics of our time” ( Poets  Writers). In  Waiting for the Barbarians , he brings together twenty-four of his recent essays—each one glinting with “verve and sparkle,” “acumen and passion”—on a wide range of subjects, from  Avatar  to the poems of Arthur Rimbaud, from our inexhaustible fascination with the  Titanic  to Susan Sontag’s  Journals. Trained as a classicist, author of two internationally best-selling memoirs, Mendelsohn moves easily from penetrating considerations of the ways in which the classics continue to make themselves felt in contemporary life and letters (Greek myth in the  Spider-Man  musical, Anne Carson’s translations of Sappho) to trenchant takes on pop spectacles—none more explosively controversial than his dissection of  Mad Men.

Also gathered here are essays devoted to the art of fiction, from Jonathan Littell’s Holocaust blockbuster  The Kindly Ones  to forgotten gems like the novels of Theodor Fontane. In a final section, “Private Lives,” prefaced by Mendelsohn’s New Yorker  essay on fake memoirs, he considers the lives and work of writers as disparate as Leo Lerman, Noël Coward, and Jonathan Franzen.  Waiting for the Barbarians  once again demonstrates that Mendelsohn’s “sweep as a cultural critic is as impressive as his depth.”