What are we doing here? Essays

Marilynne Robinson

Book - 2018

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

814.54/Robinson
3 / 4 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 814.54/Robinson Checked In
2nd Floor 814.54/Robinson Withdrawn
2nd Floor 814.54/Robinson Checked In
2nd Floor 814.54/Robinson Checked In
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Marilynne Robinson (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiv, 315 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780374282219
  • What is freedom of conscience?
  • What are we doing here?
  • Theology for the moment
  • The sacred, the human
  • The divine
  • The American scholar now
  • Grace and beauty
  • A proof, a test, an instruction
  • The beautiful changes
  • Our public conversation: how America talks about itself
  • Mind, conscience, soul
  • Considering the theological virtues: faith, hope, and love
  • Integrity and the modern intellectual tradition
  • Old souls, new world
  • Slander.
Review by New York Times Review

WHAT ARE WE DOING HERE? Essays, by Marilynne Robinson. (Picador, $18.) In a collection of lectures and other writing, the Pulitzer Prizewinning novelist and critic dwells on the current political and cultural climate, and defends the importance of the public university. Above all, Robinson returns to prominent themes across her work: the moral dimension of intellectual development, and the relationship between faith and reason. THE LOST GIRLS OF CAMP FOREVERMORE, by Kim Fu. (Mariner, $14.99.) An overnight kayaking trip becomes tragic one summer at a camp in the Pacific Northwest, and reverberates throughout the lives of the campers for years to come. Our reviewer, Lisa ??, praised the novel, writing that Fu is "a propulsive storyteller, using clear and cutting prose to move seamlessly through time." ASK ME ABOUT MY UTERUS: A Quest to Make Doctors Believe in Women's Pain, by Abby Norman. (Bold Type, $16.99.) Norman is one of millions of women across the world with endometriosis, and uses her experience as a jumping-off point to argue that women's discomfort is routinely dismissed by doctors. Along the way, she interweaves revealing anecdotes - spanning everything from Freud to recent scientific debates. DOWN THE RIVER UNTO THE SEA, by Walter Mosley. (Mulholland/Little, Brown, $15.99.) Joe King Oliver was once one of the N.Y.P.D.'s top investigators, until he was framed for sexual assault and imprisoned. Years later, he's trying to recover from the horrors he faced in jail and running a private detective agency with his teenage daughter, when he hears from the woman who accused him: She found religion and wants to clear her conscience. King then begins the tricky process of looking into who wanted him off the police force - and why. THE NINE OF US: Growing Up Kennedy, by Jean Kennedy Smith. (Harper Perennial, $16.99.) The eighth of nine children, Jean is the last surviving Kennedy sibling, and writes fondly about her experiences with the clan. Some notable episodes are absent from this slim memoir, but her recollections - especially those of a young child witnessing her father's politicking - are a sweet tribute, and give a more personal dimension to a highly public family. THE HOUSE OF BROKEN ANGELS, by Luis Alberto Urrea. (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $16.99.) This bighearted book tells the story of the La Cruzes, an exuberant Mexican-American family in San Diego, who gather as the patriarch is dying of cancer. "The novel disrespects borders," our reviewer, Viet Thanh Nguyen, wrote, calling it "a Mexican-American novel that is also an American novel."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 9, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

In one of the most moving pieces in this collection of learned and probing essays recently presented as lectures at such venues as Princeton, Harvard Divinity School, and Westminster Abbey, Robinson (The Givenness of Things, 2015) reflects on her public and philosophical conversation with gracious, good, and brilliant President Obama. Elsewhere, in instructive contrast, this Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and rigorous and inquisitive scholar of theology and history condemns sloppy habits of mind and divisive assumptions, declaring, We have surrendered thought to ideology. She calls, instead, for loyalty to the truth and makes a reverberating case for renewed support for public universities, libraries, and the humanities, which all profoundly enrich national life. Religious to her core, Robinson finds inspiration in science as the wonders it reveals affirm her awe over the complex matrix of Being. Her receptivity to all of life, ravishingly expressed in Grace and Beauty, underlies her clarion opposition to the Christian right's abandonment of Christian values and propagation of dystopian media. Robinson's gorgeous, demanding, and enlightening essays, propelled by her intricate vision of unity, radiantly recharge both mind and soul.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This collection of 15 essays by Pulitzer-winning author Robinson (The Givenness of Things) is sometimes cranky and rambling, but always passionate. Robinson's crankiness comes out in her love of Puritans, Calvinists, and Oliver Cromwell, and her annoyance at history's maligning of them. Yet it also stems from her passion for art and beauty, a humane deity, and a world run more by moral compass than balance sheet. Following Robinson's train of thought can make for a bumpy and circuitous ride, no doubt in part because most of the essays originated as spoken addresses. Yet with Robinson as guide, details in the cultural terrain emerge that one might otherwise miss. She points out in "The American Scholar Now" that when the U.S. actively funded the humanities, its prosperity simultaneously grew. Elsewhere in the same piece, she notes that "the Citizen has become the Taxpayer" as civic ideals have eroded. In "Slander" she looks with approval at the long Christian tradition of curbing one's tongue and unequivocally places blame for a now uncivil society on an unhappy convergence of "dystopian media" with right-wing Christianity. An essay or two rambles too much-"Untitled" is aptly named-but Robinson's overall trajectory is clear and important. Her eloquent work stands up for a compassionate faith, the value of education, and a sense of decency. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award for her novels, Robinson (The Givenness of Things: Essays, 2015, etc.) gathers trenchant essays about faith, values, and history, most delivered as lectures at religious institutions and universities from 2015 to 2017.Speaking at the University of Virginia, the author told her audience that she discovered, in an article on the internet, a description of herself as personifying "unhipness," a quality that she cheerfully embraces. "I am in my seventies, I was born in Idaho, I live in Iowa, I teach in a public university, and I am a self-professed Calvinist," she admits. Her unhipness, though, was given as a warning that readers "will find thinking that is very unlike their own." This fear of contradictory ideas Robinson finds deeply disturbing: history is filled with "erasures and omissions," she asserts, which skew our understanding of our shared heritage. In several essays, for example, she points to mistaken beliefs about capitalism, American exceptionalism, slavery, and the Puritans. "The convention," she writes, "is that Puritan culture was stunted intellectually, emotionally, and morally by the religious tradition that also founded Harvard and, of course, Yale, to name only local examples of their remarkable institution-building and their devotion to learning." In an essay about freedom of conscience, Robinson characterizes "Early American historiography" as "a toxic compound of cynicism and clich, so false that it falsifies by implication the history of the Western world." She blames nostalgia for the conviction that America "must once have had the authenticity and fellow feeling supposedly to be derived from a common stock," emphasizing the ethnic and religious diversity that flourished since Colonial times. Robinson is at her most lyrical when writing about Barack Obama, whom she much admires and believes to have been the ideal president for 21st-century America: "dignified, gracious, competent, and humane," showing endurance "more than heroic." The author also writes with rueful anger about the vicious slander that her mother saw on Fox News.Sharp, elegant cultural analysis. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.