Books and Ideas

Profane Illuminations Profane Illuminations

New biographies of Rousseau and Voltaire help us appreciate how very fragile the eighteenth century's great movement of ideas was, and how remarkable it is that the Enlightenment n...

Nov 17, 2005 / Books & the Arts / David A. Bell

Don’t Criticize Me Don’t Criticize Me

Karl Rove and his Singing Slimemeisters riff You Go To My Head.

Nov 17, 2005 / Books & the Arts / Calvin Trillin

Emile Capouya Emile Capouya

Emile Capouya, literary editor of The Nation from 1970-1976, was both a working man and an intellectual, who brought trade book publishing to European standards and lived to oppose...

Nov 17, 2005 / Editorial / Ted Solotaroff

In Kars and Frankfurt In Kars and Frankfurt

The winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature wrote this 2005 editorial in The Nation, addressing the issue of the artistic imagination at risk in a repressive state.

Nov 17, 2005 / Books & the Arts / Orhan Pamuk

Agee’s Gospel Agee’s Gospel

Two new volumes in the Library of America series present the life and work of James Agee, whose flashes of greatness as an essayist, screenwriter, novelist and Nation film reviewe...

Nov 17, 2005 / Books & the Arts / Phillip Lopate

The Scrivener and the Whale The Scrivener and the Whale

Andrew Delbanco's new biography of Herman Melville reveals that the great writer came to realize that what torments men is not the longing to believe that there is meaning in the u...

Nov 17, 2005 / Books & the Arts / Vivian Gornick

I Act, Therefore I Am I Act, Therefore I Am

Admired from a distance and reviled up close, Laurence Olivier could establish a relation with his audience that was like an infection. His official biography chronicles a personal...

Nov 17, 2005 / Books & the Arts / David Thomson

Monster’s Ball Monster’s Ball

Party in the Blitz, the final volume of Nobel laureate Elias Canetti's memoirs, is a chaotic, horribly fascinating memoir of a man who was a slave to love, an omnivorous intellect ...

Nov 17, 2005 / Books & the Arts / John Banville

The Ring Cycle The Ring Cycle

When Joe Louis defeated Nazi sympathizer Max Schmeling in 1938, it was the boxing match that reverberated across the world. Three new books chronicle the match and all the racial a...

Nov 16, 2005 / Books & the Arts / Gerald Early

The World According to Dowd The World According to Dowd

Maureen Dowd has done her best to declare feminism dead. But by insisting that men are scared of spunky successful women, it doesn't occur to her that she is promoting, rather than...

Nov 10, 2005 / Books & the Arts / Katha Pollitt

x