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The Essays Of Leonard Michaels (2009)

by Leonard Michaels(Favorite Author)
4.23 of 5 Votes: 4
ISBN
0374148805 (ISBN13: 9780374148805)
languge
English
genre
publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
review 1: In the essay 'Writing About Myself' Michaels explains that the problem is not to write merely about himself. I think he mastered that art. I’m biased, so far I've only read Sylvia and the Nachman stories aside from these essays. I feel like I know way too much about Michaels himself, but I don’t. This collection of essays was like talking to him. There are some idea, sentences and themes that appear more than once in the various essays and that’s what gives the impression to be having a conversation with Michaels. As he explains in the essay about Ravelstein: ‘Bellow is aware of the repetitions. It’s the way people talk.’Michael’s interest in language and sentences is something that has always attracted me. Being foreign and flirting a lot with the English la... morenguage, I’m getting more and more obsessed with it myself. In My Yiddish Michaels tackles the musicality of language: 'Ultimately, I believe, meaning has less to do with language than with music, a sensuous flow that becomes language only by default, so to speak, and by degrees. In great fiction and poetry, meaning is always close to music. Writing about a story by Gogol, Nabokov says it goes la, la, do, la la la, etc. The story’s meaning is radically musical. I’ve often had to rewrite a paragraph because the sound was wrong. When at last it seemed right, I discovered—incredibly—the sense was right. Sense follows sound.'Still in the language sphere, in 'What’s a Story?' Michaels explores one of his favorite sentences (this is one that gets mentioned more than once) by Kafka: 'A cage went in search of a bird.'To which, he comments: 'Literally preposterous, Kafka’s whole sentence mimics the action of life, as if there were no other way to seize a certain weird, ultimately inexplicable, institution: The meaning of life is that it stops.'There is another sentence that Michaels loves and repeats to us, “Whereof we cannot speak, we must be silent” of Wittgenstein. Because some things lie too deep for the scummy touch of words.
review 2: i read it thanks to the new york publich library, people! a thinker, now late. I still remember something he said about Hegel 25 years ago, those without power watch and wait, a theory of revolution. power only wants more power. he was the first no bullshit writing teacher I had, him and Thom Gunn, wiry and charismatic, and there's some good stuff in here. classy guy, don't listen to the Player Haters. Don't even hate the Game, its a good one. less
Reviews (see all)
nickcummings97
Sometimes I think that to read and re-read the essay on his father is enough. It's perfect.
jess7757
I just don't feel like being smart enough to read these essays right now.
jakesgal1904
A great book. taught me and informed me and sent me into introspection.
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