bookforum.com


online archive

5:00PM
NOV 16 2007

An elegy for the Great American Novel

From The Moscow Times, Dostoevsky Rocks: Crime and Punishment has been made into an opera; and a new television mini-series of War and Peace doesn't do Tolstoy's novel justice. A review of Classics for Pleasure by Michael Dirda. Michael Dirda reviews Portraits and Observations: The Essays of Truman Capote. A review of Fallen Angels by Harold Bloom. Holy Code, Bloody Grail: A look at the unstoppable rise and rise of Dan Brown's incredibly bad book. Ken Follett thinks The Da Vinci Code is a little masterpiece. An elegy for the great American novel: If any writer believed in the existence of the Great American Novel it was Norman Mailer. He believed in it utterly, called it the "big one" and dreamed of bagging it – like a hunter in search of game. Now, he and many of his fellow hunters are gone. Can anyone take their place? The gendered reader: Old prejudices still persist and men don’t take women authors seriously. It’s time we appreciated a writer for what she is. The imaginative landscape of Pippi Longstocking's creator encompassed a profound social commitment. On the centenary of Astrid Lindgren's birth, Birgitta Steene reflects on a Swedish writer who made an exceptional contribution to literature and public life in her homeland yet who belongs also to the world (while Lindgren's heirs crack down on rip-offs). From Slate, Happiness Is a Warm Puppy: A look at the dour genius behind Peanuts; here's a very different take on "It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown". More and more on Schulz and Peanuts: A Biography by David Michaelis. From Cracked, a look at the 5 most unintentionally hilarious comic strips.

Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.
Click for more info.