A Peaceful, but Very Interesting Pursuit

By Lisa Levy On January 31, 2012 · In Lives of the Critics

I wrote an essay up at The Rumpus about T.S.Eliot’s years as a bank clerk.

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The Understated Charms of Ellen Willis

By Lisa Levy On January 24, 2012 · In Critical Distance

Ellen Willis was a no-nonsense, resolutely feminist, always engaging rock critic and essayist who wrote for publications including Rolling Stone, the Nation, the Village Voice, and the New Yorker (where she was the first rock critic). Her voice is sophisticated—maybe savvy is the better word—but always real. She dances to [...]

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Going Sane, Going Soft: The Evolution of Adam Phillips

On January 3, 2012 By Lisa Levy

My essay on Adam Phillips is up at The Bookslut.

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Cracking Up

On December 21, 2011 By Lisa Levy

“Echoes of The Jazz Age”

What F. Scott Fitzgerald knew best, and wrote about with unsurpassed style and insight, was himself. The Crack-Up, a series of seven personal essays he published in Esquire (then published posthumously as part of a collection edited by his friend Edmund Wilson), marked [...]

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Library Porn

On December 19, 2011 By Lisa Levy

My review of Unpacking My Library, edited by Leah Price, is up at The Rumpus. I call it “coffee-table fodder for the nerd set.”

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The Very Short Dead Critics Gift Guide

On December 8, 2011 By Lisa Levy

In the 1950s, three esteemed critics, Jacques Barzun, W.H. Auden, and Lionel Trilling formed the editorial board of the Readers’ Subscription Book Club. That Club and its successor, The Mid-Century Book Club, had as their missions to bring sophisticated new and classic books to a general public. The essays these critics wrote individually as introductions [...]

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Criticism, The Desperate Art

On November 29, 2011 By Lisa Levy

Before she was Pauline Kael, New Yorker movie critic, Pauline Kael was one of many young American writers in the sway of the great critics of the 1930s. In his recently published biography, Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark, Brian Kellow singles out R.P. Blackmur as a [...]

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Ann Beattie Builds Character

On November 15, 2011 By Lisa Levy

Asked about a common thread in her early stories, Ann Beattie answered that they were “filled with my personal worry beads: music, more music, dogs, digs at Nixon.” Now, as if to do penance for all of those digs, she has written a book about Mrs. Nixon.  Not Pat Nixon, [...]

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Reread Me at The Millions

On November 11, 2011 By Lisa Levy

My essay on rereading is up at The Millions.

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Parenting and Privilege in Joan Didion’s Blue Nights

On November 8, 2011 By Lisa Levy

The deluge of praise heaped on Joan Didion’s Blue Nights has been excessive, bordering on sycophantic. The New York Times has run three pieces about the book (a daily review, a Sunday review, and an essay about Didion as a “polarizing force”). The Los Angeles Review of Books ran a whole [...]

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"My review of Alain de Botton's Religion for Atheists is up at @The_Millions t.co/Zi4n4aw8— RealLiveCritic

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