[ z ē ' n ĭ t h ]   -noun   1. an arch wherethrough gleams that untraveled world...

Posts tagged "book review"
Yes, You Can Trust Him

Yes, You Can Trust Him

Stephen King is one of those writers self-proclaimed literary authors avoid reading. He must be doing something right, however, because as of this moment, King has written 49 novels and sold more than 350 million copies.
The Limits of Motherhood

The Limits of Motherhood

In Emma Donoghue's "Room" we get the sweet side of hell, the joy of having a mother all to ourselves with no chance of separation—a motherhood that seems infinite in its reach in the compressed world they share.
Subtle Adventures in Nihilism

Subtle Adventures in Nihilism

Because the most adept of readers loves nothing more than to turn the pages; because we don’t let things like prose style or plausibility creep into our consciousness... because one prefers caricatures to characters, The Help is the most remarkable novel we’ve come across in years.
The Myth of Morality

The Myth of Morality

Where The Pale King is concerned, everyone agrees that David Foster Wallace enshrines boredom. What has been glossed over, however, is how fiercely and unrepentantly American these pages are.
The Pleasure and Pain of Lovers and Readers

The Pleasure and Pain of Lovers and Readers

Love is something beyond us—something just within our fingertips but always taking that one extra step to elude us. In the end we begin to realize that this is perhaps for the best—that it is maybe more fortunate than we realize.
Death with Interruptions: A Glimpse of the Literary Philosopher

Death with Interruptions: A Glimpse of the Literary Philosopher

In an unnamed European country, the first day of the new year is cause for both alarm and celebration. It is the first day in that country’s history that passes without a death.
The 100 Most Beautiful Words in English: A Linguist's Quaint Passion

The 100 Most Beautiful Words in English: A Linguist’s Quaint Passion

It’s one of those concepts that has driven men and women to compose treatises in verse, drink themselves comatose, start fights, and maybe even die young. Unfortunately we have nothing to show for it.

Lost and Found: Adolescent Obsession in Hannah Pittard’s Debut Novel

Comparisons to Jeffrey Eugenides' The Virgin Suicides are unavoidable and complimentary: here, too, is a Greek-style chorus of boys grown to men, as well as their obsession with a female classmate and the reconstruction of a life from supposition.

The War Against Cliché: What We Can Learn from Martin Amis

Chess, football, even famous writers. Martin Amis can write about anything.

Some with Bicycles, Some Without: The Women of the Rumpus

Women of color, lesbian women, straight women, youthful women, mature women, and even possibly crazy women are included in this first volume. Some of the women take off their clothes and some commit suicide; others refuse to do either. At times the diversity can seem contrived, but for the most part, this is a solid...

The Tin Drum: A Startling Vision of WWII

In this first and famous novel by Nobel laureate Günter Grass, the horrors of Nazi Germany are transformed into beauty and magic.

Consider the Lobster: Defining the Elusive Genius

A look at David Foster Wallace’s 2006 collection of essays reveals much more than admiration for a body of literary work.