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Reviews
"Words Fail Me," "Sin and Syntax" and "Sleeping Dogs Don't Lay"
Three new guides to grammar and style approach the rules with a liberal informality and a healthy dash of humor.

By Gary Kaufman
[09/20/99]

Ivory Tower
Thicker than blood
Why does college life teach students to lose the family to find the self?

By Simon Rodberg
[09/20/99]

Reviews
"A Book of Reasons"
Looking into the reclusive life of his late brother, a novelist produces an anti-memoir.

By Dustin Beilke
[09/17/99]

Ivory Tower
Epic moment
Sometimes we just have to stand aside and let our students become the teachers.

By David Alford
[09/17/99]


Sells like Teen Spirit
Savvy about the media, steeped in pop psychology, today's kids have problems the experts still don't understand.

By Alissa Quart
[09/16/99]

Complete archives for Books

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++++=. The docu-novel
++++==The author of "Bellefleur" selects
++++==five great "nonfiction novels."

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By Joyce Carol Oates

Sept. 20, 1999 | The Executioner’s Song by Norman Mailer
A massive, 1,000-page documentary novel of numerous voices bearing witness to the troubled life and eventual death (by firing squad, in Utah) of convicted murderer Gary Gilmore; remarkably for Mailer, a novel in uninflected American vernacular, from which the author himself seems absent.

The World as I Found It by Bruce Duffy
Another massive but intellectually and stylistically rigorous novel of real-life individuals: Ludwig Wittgenstein, the most controversial philosopher of the 20th century; Bertrand Russell, Wittgenstein's elder and, for a time, his mentor; and G.E. Moore, the celebrated Cambridge don. A bold and original work of fiction that imaginatively evokes a vanished world, populated by such men and women as Sigmund Freud, D.H. Lawrence, Lady Ottoline Morrell and Karl Krauss. "The World as I Found It" must be one of the most ambitious first novels ever published.

Dreamer by Charles Johnson
Succinct, slender, poetic rather than documentary in its language, this bold novel explores the private and public lives of Martin Luther King Jr. Like Johnson’s fiction generally, "Dreamer" has a parable-like quality despite its historic subject.

Cloudsplitter by Russell Banks
Another massive, monumental work, an imaginative evocation of the life of our most controversial abolitionist, John Brown. Visionary martyr? Madman? Figure of destiny? The novel is recounted by Brown’s last surviving son, Owen Brown, from a fictitious perspective, in compelling, convincing 19th century-style prose.

The Hours by Michael Cunningham
One of the riskiest, most discussed and most successful of recent literary novels, this is a wonderfully imaginative, original blend of biography (the last days of Virginia Woolf, who commits suicide in 1941, in the poetically written prologue) and fiction (the interlocked lives of two contemporary American women linked by their connection with the Woolf novel "Mrs. Dalloway" and by their love for a young man dying of AIDS).
salon.com | Sept. 20, 1999

 

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About the writer
Joyce Carol Oates is the author of many novels, including, most recently, "Starr Bright Will Be With You Soon."

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