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  • Pico Iyer: A Critic Calling for the Pissboy

    Pico Iyer: A Critic Calling for the Pissboy

    Pico Iyer’s anti-intellectual review in today’s New York Times Book Review begins with the sentence: “I confess, dear reader: I’ve always had a problem with William T. Vollmann.” This raises the question of why Iyer was even assigned the review in the first place. Certainly,...

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  • Alain de Botton Clarifies the Caleb Crain Response

    Alain de Botton Clarifies the Caleb Crain Response

    (This is the first of an interconnected two part response involving Alain de Botton. In addition to answering my questions, Alain de Botton was very gracious to send along this essay.) In last Sunday’s New York Times Book Review, Caleb Crain reviewed Alain de Botton’s...

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  • An Urgent Plea to Sam Tanenhaus

    An Urgent Plea to Sam Tanenhaus

    Mr. Tanenhaus, while we profoundly disagree on a number of points, I must echo the sentiments of my colleague. Your concerns, interests, and curiosity are clearly within politics, and the time has come for you to resign from the New York Times and take a...

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  • In Which I Talk with Tanenhaus

    In Which I Talk with Tanenhaus

    On Wednesday night, Sam Tanenhaus and I talked. I was in the middle of arguing with my colleague Levi Asher about the future of literary coverage, saying something to him about a priori arguments in relation to rumors about The Washington Post Book World. A...

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  • A Decent Issue of the NYTBR for Once?

    A Decent Issue of the NYTBR for Once?

    I am especially surprised to see that this week’s edition of the New York Times Book Review has a lot of good material. I don’t know if some crafty editor over there who still cares about books had the bright idea of tying up Sam...

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  • The Knopf Times Book Review

    The Knopf Times Book Review

    [UPDATE: On the evening of January 21, 2009, I asked Tanenhaus in person about the concerns satirized below, and I was able to get a few answers. I point readers of this post to the direction of my later post, "In Which I Talk with...

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  • Virginia Heffernan: The Sarah Palin of Journalism

    Virginia Heffernan: The Sarah Palin of Journalism

    The review came over the long Thanksgiving weekend, but the 757 words that Virginia Heffernan devoted to savaging Sarah Vowell’s The Wordy Shipmates on Sunday have little to do with Vowell’s book. Heffernan is the kind of reviewer that Coleridge accurately identified as failed talent....

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  • RIP John Leonard

    RIP John Leonard

    If the reviews are read, it is by those who seek a confirmation, either of their own gut reaction to a new sit-com or of a suspicion that you are a jerk. You can no more review TV according to agreed-upon criteria than you can...

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  • NYTBR: Polishing the Rails

    NYTBR: Polishing the Rails

    News emerged over the weekend that Dwight Garner was fleeing the New York Times Book Review for a gig as a daily books critic. With Rachel Donadio leaving the Book Review in the summer and Sam Tanenhaus performing double duty as editor of NYTBR and...

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  • Quick Roundup

    Quick Roundup

    There are many films that must be ingested and/or masticated upon today. Coffee is currently brewing, and it is decidedly autumn outside. And here are a few bagatelles to tide you over. The 2008 MacArthur fellows have been announced. On the literary front, there’s Chimamanda...

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  • Quick Roundup

    Quick Roundup

    Some very lengthy cultural reports are coming here soon. But in the meantime… In a move that may infuriate the stodgier reactionaries of our literary community, Ward Sutton has reviewed Indignation in cartoon form. I think this is a good idea. And I think that...

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  • Fair is Fair

    Fair is Fair

    A few days ago, Gregory Cowles was upbraided on these pages for getting his facts incorrect in relation to a blog post concerning itself with the Franzen/Marcus affair that went down in Harper’s over the past few years. The error was not noted with the...

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  • Roundup

    Roundup

    In the past few weeks (and, particularly, the last seven days), I have read many thousands of pages. This is probably more work than one should do for a piece of this type, but I am one of those guys who likes to perform due...

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  • The Bat Segundo Show: Ethan Canin

    The Bat Segundo Show: Ethan Canin

    Ethan Canin appeared on The Bat Segundo Show #228. Canin is most recently the author of America America. Condition of Mr. Segundo: Examining his miserable relationship with America. Author: Ethan Canin Subjects Discussed: Neil Diamond’s “America,” the stuttering titular impulse, the Corvair, journalists as heroes,...

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  • Roundup

    Roundup

    Details on the Save Segundo Plan will be put up here very soon. With the exception of Saturday’s much-needed musical fiesta, I’ve spent the weekend working. My research suggests that the way out is possible, although it will certainly not be easy. More TK. Adam...

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  • Roundup

    Roundup

    While Critical Mass continues to perpetuate its collective ego stroking, remaining silent about developments at the Los Angeles Times, LA Observed reports that the last Sunday Book Review/Opinion section will run on July 27. After that, books coverage will run in the Calendar section and...

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  • Confessions of a 21st Century Book Reviewer

    Confessions of a 21st Century Book Reviewer

    In a hot and overpriced room littered with phantom cigarettes (now only for the reckless and rich at $9 a pack; so much for the legal vices) and warm, half-empty beer bottles that he’s hoping will meet his alcoholic needs for the week, a man...

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  • The Bat Segundo Show: Ed Park

    The Bat Segundo Show: Ed Park

    Ed Park appeared on The Bat Segundo Show #211. Park is most recently the author of Personal Days. His book was reviewed today in the NYTBR by Mark Sarvas. Condition of the Show: Plagued by brutal downsizing. Author: Ed Park Subjects Discussed: Literary people named...

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  • Roundup

    Roundup

    Bryan Appleyard uses the occasion of Tim Russert’s passing to note the distinctions between American and British journalism. While it’s certainly true that many American television personalities are polite, the class that Appleyard describes frequently borders on sycophantism. If we can’t have someone like Dick...

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  • Roundup

    Roundup

    Like, oh my God! What the hell is going on? Chuck Palahniuk is writing books and I like totally can’t understand him! I mean, like, why is this Palahniuk guy writing about porn? Don’t you like automatically get VD if you have sex with more...

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  • The Been Caught Stealin’ Wi-Fi Roundup

    The Been Caught Stealin’ Wi-Fi Roundup

    Thanks to some technical trickery, I am now stealing wi-fi on my relocated desktop computer. This casual pilfering should last only a few days, and I have tried to keep this bandwidth theft to a minimum. Which means that email is spotty these days. (I...

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  • David Kamp, Blog Snob

    David Kamp, Blog Snob

    Ten years from now, we’ll all be inured to David Kamp. A whole generation will have grown up as his book, The United States of Arugula, has been long forgotten — the remaining copies pulped or perhaps used as oversized skeet shooting pellets, because they...

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  • NYTBR: Bill Keller Can Do No Wrong

    NYTBR: Bill Keller Can Do No Wrong

    Just when you think the New York Times Book Review couldn’t get any sleazier, editor Sam Tanenhaus has proven yet again that there isn’t an unctuous pool he won’t dive into. The latest disgrace is Ruth Conniff’s review of Bill Keller’s Tree Shaker. Bill Keller,...

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  • Dave Itzkoff: The Genre Dunce Who Won’t Stop Dancing

    Dave Itzkoff: The Genre Dunce Who Won’t Stop Dancing

    Dave Itzkoff has been an embarrassment to the New York Times Book Review for some time, imbuing his “Across the Universe” columns with a know-nothing hubris that one expects from an investment banker who considers himself an art expert simply because he’s had his secretary...

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  • Rep. Randy Forbes: Revisionist Historian

    Rep. Randy Forbes: Revisionist Historian

    House Resolution 888 (presumably 666 was unavailable) aims to celebrate and glorify a little bit of that ol’ time religion in a very big way. The resolution, introduced by Rep. Randy Forbes of Virginia and signed on and unquestioned by 31 co-sponsors, wishes to “rejec[t],...

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  • Dave Itzkoff: The Laziest Columnist Ever Hired by the NYTBR?

    Dave Itzkoff: The Laziest Columnist Ever Hired by the NYTBR?

    Andrew Wheeler: “Blowing off half a year and then not doing the reading is what a layabout does at a minor state college, not the expected behavior of a columnist for The New York Times Book Review. Itzkoff has always been embarrassing, but this is...

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  • NYTBR: Safer Than Pat Boone

    NYTBR: Safer Than Pat Boone

    If there are four words that best describe the NYTBR‘s Top Ten Books of 2007, they are: We Take No Chances. url='http://www.edrants.com/nytbr-safer-than-pat-boone/';size='small';

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  • Drive-By Roundup

    Drive-By Roundup

    Crazy day. Thus, brief summations. Inflate your numbers much, publishers? Apparently, DHS digs Death Cab for Cutie. This 75-year-old woman hammered the point home. Good on her. (via the Other Reluctant) Chris Pine will play Kirk in the forthcoming Star Trek movie. Who? Mailer’s in...

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  • Roundup

    Roundup

    To paraphrase Sam Tanenhaus, who profits if Bill Watterson doesn’t write it? Clearly, not the NYTBR. The WSJ has coaxed the reclusive Bill Watterson out of retirement for a review of the new David Michaelis’s Charles Schulz biography. Meanwhile, the Schulz family has cried foul....

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  • Questions for Sam Tanenhaus

    Questions for Sam Tanenhaus

    Since Faust was a tragic play, an opera, and a film, how can Schlesinger “paint” his defection as Faustian? Sure, Goethe was an occasional painter, but even he had his doubts. Also, as neologisms go, “irono-babe” is about as inviting as Infobahn. (And why the...

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