Life and Art
Essays
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Lu par :
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Richard Russo
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De :
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Richard Russo
À propos de ce contenu audio
Life and Art—these are the twin subjects considered in Richard Russo’s twelve masterful new essays—how they inform each other and how the stories we tell ourselves about both shape our understanding of the world around us.
In “The Lives of Others,” he reflects on the implacable fact that writers use people, insisting that what matters, in the end, is how and for what purpose. How do you bridge the gap between what you know and what you don’t, and sometimes can’t, know? Why tell a story in the first place? What we don’t understand, Russo opines, is in fact the very thing that beckons to us. In “Stiff Neck,” he writes of the exasperating fault lines exposed within his own family as his wife’s sister and her husband—proudly unvaccinated—develop COVID. In “Triage,” he details with heartbreaking vividness the terror of seeing his seven-year-old grandson in critical condition. And in “Ghosts,” he revisits Gloversville, the town that gave rise to the now-legendary fictional town of North Bath, and confronts the specter of its richly populated past and its ghostly present.
Sharp, tender, extraordinarily intimate reflections on work, culture, love, and family from one of the great writers of our time.
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Commentaires
"Russo scholars will devour this book. . . . Aspiring writers should appreciate the advice Russo doles out in these pages." —Associated Press
"If the essay is a dying art, Life and Art proves its enduring necessity. In an era where surface-level engagement dominates, Russo's collection insists that the essay still has the power to excavate, illuminate, and endure." —The Arkansas Democrat Gazette
“Russo’s skill as a storyteller is on full display.” —Publishers Weekly
“A welcome visit with a major contemporary writer.” —Library Journal
“Despite their brevity and transparency, Life and Art's insightful explorations offer more grist for contemplation than many longer and superficially more complex works.” —Shelf Awareness
"If the essay is a dying art, Life and Art proves its enduring necessity. In an era where surface-level engagement dominates, Russo's collection insists that the essay still has the power to excavate, illuminate, and endure." —The Arkansas Democrat Gazette
“Russo’s skill as a storyteller is on full display.” —Publishers Weekly
“A welcome visit with a major contemporary writer.” —Library Journal
“Despite their brevity and transparency, Life and Art's insightful explorations offer more grist for contemplation than many longer and superficially more complex works.” —Shelf Awareness
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