"I picked this book for reasons that are fairly obvious, and it actually didn't come out this year. It came out in 2016, and it's a collection of essays called
This Thing We Call Literature by Arthur Krystal. He's a book reviewer and literary critic, and I read something he wrote early on this year and was so blown away by it that I had to go buy the book. He's a really clear, simple, direct writer. In this time, in the Trump era, where there's a backlash against postmodernism and there are these culture wars and conflicts, especially concerning academia, Krystal's book is really a defense of the canon, or at least, a defense of the idea that we should be arguing for the value of a canon. He has such a measured, enjoyable tone." -- Rider Strong via "Literary Disco's Best Books We Read [in 2018]",
Literary Hub"As Jeremiahs go, Arthur Krystal is an affable, erudite one, who dispenses his opinions with humour but also with steel [...] A typical Krystal essay or review balances insight, sense and humour [...]
This Thing We Call Literature is 'essentially a lament and not a condemnation of the general literary culture' although there is condemnation of those who trumpet the new as the great, or elevate the second rateâ [H]is longest essay is a consideration of Erich Auerbach [...] a well-rounded portrait of a man who seemed to share Dante's sense of tragic destiny [...] a critic with occasional failings, but a master of the philological approach to literature. Krystal's interest in Auerbach suggests there is life in high culture yet." -- Tony Roberts,
PN Review"Arthur Krystal's fourth collection,
This Thing We Call Literature, gathers ten essays on a double subject: the special dialogue that connects one reader with one author, and what all such dialogues have in common .... The mid-century proponents of general ideas of culture and literature have faded, and the ideas have faded with them. In striking contrast, Krystal's essay on Auerbach celebrates a way of reading that seems perennially and immediately present: in Auerbach's phrase about a soul in Dante's paradise, "a living reality." Krystal's essay achieves criticism's most useful task: it sends a reader back to an author with renewed excitement." --Edward Mendelson,
The New York Review of Books"...[Krystal's] subjects are writing and reading, once acknowledged as practices central to being a thoughtful, reasonably well-educated person, and now the objects of casual disparagement and neglect, threatened with slow extinction. An unapologetically bookish (though seldom pedantic) fellow, Krystal does his damnedest to sound hopeful but is too honest to fall for happy talk...Obvious here is Krystal's celebratory impulse. In each of his essays, he reminds us there is much to lament but even more to revel in. A well-read person is more likely to be good company than a nonreader, he suggests. A love of books implies, but doesn't guarantee, a sensibility of substance. The world is littered with bookish boors and monsters. Perhaps literature is merely the thing that fills the literature-shaped hole inside some of us. Krystal always returns to the reader, one person alone with a book and the tradition from which it emerges." --Patrick Kurp,
Los Angeles Review of Books"Krystal is a gifted essayist, and those who have read him over the years will find everything they've come to appreciate about his style in
This Thing Called Literature--the bold pronouncements, the expertly timed hedge, the fluid prose, and the wide reading." --
The American Conservative"Several times on each page Arthur Krystal writes something you want to remember, something you know will come in handy and qualify as what Kenneth Burke called 'equipment for living.' This slows down reading, of course, which is always a good thing, and leaves some pages almost opaque with underlinings and notes, but Krystal regularly writes things you may have thought in passing, or wish you had, but failed to articulate in words. ... Detractors will dismiss him as 'elitist' or 'reactionary' but he is neither. He really loves literature. That used to be a not uncommon condition, like being able to sing in key or do the backstroke. Now it's come to feel like having a notably trivial hobby." --
Anecdotal Evidence"If you've never had the pleasure - and challenge - of reading the witty, trenchant cultural criticism of Arthur Krystal, who's been called "the George Clooney of the essay world," you might start with his new collection
This Thing We Call Literature. The Clooney reference fits because Krystal's prose is confident, intimate, seductive...[A] commitment to the serious or high minded need not rule out humor, charm, self-deprecation. [Krystal's] screed is against the loss of literary standards; against those who value the ordinary and the meretricious equally with the classic and essential; against those for whom craft and discipline seem to matter less than "sharing" their feelings." --
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