Sunday, February 14, 2021
Friday, February 12, 2021
Tom Wolfe
- p. 589-90, The Best American Essays of the Century.
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 318). Ticknor & Fields.
Geoffrey C. Ward
- Back Cover, The Best American Essays 1996.
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 318). Ticknor & Fields.
Calvin Trillin
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 318). Ticknor & Fields.
Robert Stone
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 318). Ticknor & Fields.
Scott Russell Sanders
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 317-8). Ticknor & Fields.
Phyllis Rose
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 317). Ticknor & Fields.
Gregor Von Rezzori
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 317). Ticknor & Fields.
Samuel Pickering, JR.
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 317). Ticknor & Fields.
William Pfaff
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 317). Ticknor & Fields.
Elting E. Morison
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 317). Ticknor & Fields.
Barry Lopez
BARRY LOPEZ (1945-2020) published the novel Horizon in 2019. The New York Times Book Review called it "...beautiful and brutal—a story of the universal human condition." A celebrated writer of fiction and nonfiction, Lopez was awarded the National Book Award for Arctic Dreams and the John Burrows Medal for Of Wolves and Men; he received a Guggenheim fellowship among other honors. In 2020, Lopez was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters and received the Sun Valley Writers' Conference's first Writer in the World Prize. Throughout his writing life, Lopez collaborated with dozens of international writers and artists and fostered the careers of many younger men and women. For fifty years, Lopez lived next to his beloved McKenzie River in Oregon yet also traveled to more than eighty countries, where he enjoyed rich friendships. He died in December 2020, surrounded by his family.
- The Best American Essays 2021 (p. 203). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
BARRY LOPEZ has published several collections of short stories and is the author of Arctic Dreams, which won an American Book Award in 1986, and Of Wolves and Men, which won the John Burroughs Medal in 1979. A contributing editor to Harper's and North American Review, he has received an Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. His new book, Crossing Open Ground, will be published next year.
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 316-7). Ticknor & Fields.
Phillip Lopate
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 316). Ticknor & Fields.
Donald Hall
- p. 577, The Best American Essays of the Century.
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 316). Ticknor & Fields.
Gary Giddins
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 316). Ticknor & Fields.
Daniel Mark Epstein
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 316). Ticknor & Fields.
Gretel Ehrlich
- p. 574, The Best American Essays of the Century.
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 315). Ticknor & Fields.
John Gregory Dunne
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 315). Ticknor & Fields.
Richard Ben Cramer
- The Best American Essays 1987 (p. 315). Ticknor & Fields.
Thursday, February 11, 2021
The American Scholar
The Kenyon Review
Grand Street
John Wain
- p. 285, The Best American Essays 1986.
Gore Vidal
- p. 285, The Best American Essays 1986.
Frederick Turner
- p. 285, The Best American Essays 1986.
Edward Rothstein
- p. 285, The Best American Essays 1986.
Cynthia Ozick
"An essay," claims Cynthia Ozick, "is a thing of the imagination...A genuine essay has no educational, polemical, or sociopolitical use; it is movement of a free mind at play." Essays, like the award-winning short stories and novels, she is known for, are imaginative and aesthetic experiments — in other words, literature — not position papers. Born (1928) in the Pelham Bay section of the Bronx, Ozick grew up in the atmosphere of a family-operated drugstore. After receiving her B.A. at New York University in 1949 and a year later an M.A. at Ohio State, Ozick called it quits with academic life and set out to take lessons from her master, Henry James, in the demanding art of fiction. Her first novel, Trust, appeared in 1966 and was followed by several volumes of short fiction and three more novels, The Cannibal Galaxy (1983), The Messiah of Stockholm (1987), and The Puttermesser Papers (1997). Her personal and literary essays appear in four collections: Art & Ardor (1983), Metaphor & Memory (1989), Fame & Folly (1986), and Quarrel & Quandary (2000). She is also the author of two essay collections on writing, What Henry James Knew (1993) and Portrait of the Artist as a Bad Character (1996). Ozick was guest editor of The Best American Essay of 1998.
- p. 584, The Best American Essays of the Century.
- Back Cover, The Best American Essays 1998.
CYNTHIA OZICK is the author of two novels, Trust and The Cannibal Galazy, and several collections: The Pagan Rabbi and Other Stories, Bloodshed and Three Novellas, and Levitation: Five Fictions. She has published Art & Ardor Essays and is currently at work on a novel.
- p. 284-5, The Best American Essays 1986.
George F. Kennan
- p. 284, The Best American Essays 1986.
Anne Hollander
- p. 284, The Best American Essays 1986.
Stephen Jay Gould
- p. 284, The Best American Essays 1986.
William H. Gass
- p. 576, The Best American Essays of the Century.
- p. 284, The Best American Essays 1986.
Robert Fitzgerald
- p. 284, The Best American Essays 1986.
Kai Erikson
- p. 283-4, The Best American Essays 1986.
Gerald Early
- p. 573-4, The Best American Essays of the Century.
- p. 283, The Best American Essays 1986.
Alexander Cockburn
ALEXANDER COCKBURN has been an Irish citizen resident of the United States since 1973. He writes regular columns for The Nation and The Wall Street Journal, and contributes to many magazines. He is currently writing books about the press and about automobiles.
- p. 283, The Best American Essays 1986.
How to be an Obedient Asian in America
Use few words. Speak less, be unnoticeable. Know when to speak, and know what you're talking about when you speak. Forget what they told you about how you have to make mistakes to learn. Bullshit. That is for them, not you. Learn on your own, do not ask for help. Be useful in whatever you do. Yes, they will talk about you. How you are unsociable. But they also know for a fact, that you are useful.
Forget about equality. You aren't even fun enough to have beer with. It doesn't matter how well you do your job. You won't be part of them. You won't be part of them when they are laughing and joking during work, while you're the only one who's actually working at work. Be unnoticeable until they come to collect your products of your work. And they will reap the fruits of your work, while they're laughing and joking with a beer in their hands with your boss. They will tell you that you're doing great, that you're a Great American. Yeah, whatever, now you're probably like, fuck America.
Be sure to be frugal. Max out your 401k, and do the same for your IRA. In the end you will be a millionaire, and you won't have to see them again. But in retirement they won't even realize the bad financial decisions they've made, because those laughs and jokes got them higher than your hard work. They will keep on enjoying their beers and laughing an joking, and you will die a millionaire because you never unlearned being frugal.
In your deathbed you will wonder why all the troubles you endured being an obedient Asian in America, you will die yearning for the land you left to be free. You've made this land of the free more fertile, and your sons and daughters won't realize how free they are because the never experienced the opposite.
But rest in peace, be assured that your heirs will be real Americans. Their friends will joke and giggle how stereo-typically rich they are, from the money you never learned to waste. They won't even get offended at the Asian jokes and racial slurs because their origin is blurred. In America it doesn't matter what race you are, as long as you know how to laugh and giggle over a beer. If then you will be part of the team, no matter where the team headed.
Lionel Shriver
A prolific journalist with columns in The Spectator and Harper's Magazine, LIONEL SHRIVER has published one short story collection and fourteen novels, including the bestsellers The Mandibles: A Family, 2029-2047; Big Brother; So Much for That; The Post-Birthday World; and the Orange Prize winner We Need to Talk About Kevin (a 2011 feature film starring Tilda Swinton). Her latest novel is The Motion of the Body Through Space (2020). Her work has been translated into more than thirty languages. She lives in London and Brooklyn, New York.
- p. 276, The Best American Essays 2020.