The making of the American essay

Book - 2016

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814.08/Making
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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Graywolf Press [2016]
Language
English
Other Authors
John D'Agata, 1974- (editor)
Item Description
Anthology of essays originally published 1630-1974.
"The final volume in John D'Agata's landmark series, A new history of the essay"--Page 4 of cover.
Physical Description
798 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781555977344
  • For my dear son Simon Bradstreet / Anne Bradstreet
  • The narrative of the captivity / Mary Rowlandson
  • Sinners in the hands of an angry God / Jonathan Edwards
  • On snakes : and on the humming-bird / J. Hector St. John
  • A history of New York / Washington Irving
  • Nature / Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Walking / Henry David Thoreau
  • The whiteness of the whale / Herman Melville
  • A chapter on autography / Edgar Allan Poe
  • To recipient unknown / Emily Dickinson
  • The weather : does it sympathize with these times?
  • Walt Whitman
  • A Matisse / William Carlos Williams
  • The dry salvages / T.S. Eliot
  • Of the coming of John / W.E.B. Du Bois
  • Letters from the earth / Mark Twain
  • All the numbers from Numbers / Kenneth Goldsmith
  • Blood-burning moon / Jean Toomer
  • If I told him : a completed portrait of Picasso / Gertrude Stein
  • In a café / Laura Riding Jackson
  • Testimony : the United States / Charles Reznikoff
  • The crack-up / F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Brooklyn is / James Agee
  • What else / Walter Abish
  • Once more to the lake / E.B. White
  • Lecture on nothing / John Cage
  • In the fifties / Leonard Michaels
  • The yellow bus / Lillian Ross
  • Ten thousand words a minute / Norman Mailer
  • The fight : Patterson vs. Liston / James Baldwin
  • The kandy-kolored tangerine-flake streamline baby / Tom Wolfe
  • Frank Sinatra has a cold / Gay Talese
  • In the heart of the heart of the country / William Gass
  • The way to Rainy Mountain / N. Scott Momaday
  • I remember / Joe Brainard
  • Sentence / Donald Barthelme
  • Signified / Susan Steinberg
  • Brownstone / Renata Adler
  • Humility / Kathy Acker
  • Elliptical / Harryette Mullen.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A literary anthology and textbook incorporating some three dozen presumably teachable essayssome of which are not essays at all. Why would Charles Reznikoff's Testimony: The United States (1934), a classic of modernist poetry, figure in an anthology devoted to the essay? We'll never know, apart from the whispery suggestion that the poem had its origins in court transcripts that were then broken into lines of verse "to accentuate common speech"thus, presumably, qualifying as an essay. But what of T.S. Eliot's "Dry Salvages," the third of his famed four quartets? Again, D'Agata (Creative Writing/Univ. of Iowa; About a Mountain, 2010, etc.) offers an indistinct distinction in which an essay is presumably a piece that addresses "how each of us individually processes perception, how experience is layered, and knowledge uncertain." At this point, Montaigne would be reaching for his rapier. The value added to an anthology of any sort is the interpretation of the pieces that make it up on top of whatever rarity or literary quality they might have. In this regard, the editor's glancing notes are far from useful; although admittedly poetic and spiritually embracing, his remark that the book finds its contents "situated as essays always are between chance and contrivance, between the given and the made" is completely unhelpful. As for rarity? Any anthology that includes Henry David Thoreau's "Walking," available in dozens of other anthologies and hundreds of websites, lacks vigor; several hundred pages are in the public domain and readily available elsewhere. What about literary quality? In that regard, the anthology shines, for there are some very good things, including selections from the captivity narratives (not essays, mind you) of Mary Rowlandson, albeit without meaningful interpretation of her place in literary history; from F. Scott Fitzgerald's now little-read The Crack-Up, ditto; and from Gay Talese's essential but still already much-reprinted "Frank Sinatra Has a Cold." The editors of the Norton anthologies need not worry: their position in literature and in the market remains secure. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.