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Familiarity Breeds Content
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 464

Familiarity Breeds Content

A collection of personal essays from America’s most revered essay writer, Joseph Epstein. America’s greatest living essayist writes about life and aging and being all too nicely out of it. In these personal pieces, he takes on topics as varied as grieving for a dead son, learning Latin late in life, and the pleasures of living with cats. Epstein gives us a “bonfire of his own vanities,” his thoughts about why watching sports is so impossibly seductive, what it is like to be short, and why he misses smoking even decades as a health-obsessed non-smoker. Above all, he writes about the literary life and the endless joys that reading and writing have brought to a self-confessed “lucky man.”

Partial Payments
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 436

Partial Payments

A collection of essays by Joseph Epstein on authors to whom he feels indebted, has revered and learned from.

Envy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 158

Envy

Malice that cannot speak its name, cold-blooded but secret hostility, impotent desire, hidden rancor and spite--all cluster at the center of envy. Envy clouds thought, writes Joseph Epstein, clobbers generosity, precludes any hope of serenity, and ends in shriveling the heart. Of the seven deadly sins, he concludes, only envy is no fun at all.Writing in a conversational, erudite, self-deprecating style that wears its learning lightly, Epstein takes us on a stimulating tour of the many faces of envy. He considers what great thinkers--such as John Rawls, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche--have written about envy; distinguishes between envy, yearning, jealousy, resentment, and schadenfreude ("a hardy...

Essays in Biography
  • Language: en

Essays in Biography

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Who is the greatest living essayist writing in English? Unquestionably Joseph Epstein. Epstein is penetrating. He is witty. He has a magic touch with words, that hard to define but immediately recognizable quality called style. Above all, he is impossible to put down. How easy it is today to forget the simple delight of reading for no intended purpose. Each of the 39 pieces in this book is a pure pleasure to read.

Literary Genius
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 258

Literary Genius

Profiles of 25 great writers whose works help us see the world in new ways.

Snobbery
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 293

Snobbery

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2003-07-07
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  • Publisher: HMH

Observations on the many ways we manage to look down on others, from “a writer who can make you laugh out loud on every third page” (The New York Times Book Review). Snobs are everywhere. At the gym, at work, at school, and sometimes even lurking in your own home. But how did we, as a culture, get this way? With dishy detail, Joseph Epstein skewers all manner of elitism as he examines how snobbery works, where it thrives, and the pitfalls and perils in thinking you’re better than anyone else. Offering arch observations on the new footholds of snobbery, including food, fashion, high-achieving children, schools, politics, being with-it—whatever “it” is—name-dropping, and much more, Epstein explores the shallows and depths of a concept that has become part of our everyday lives . . . for better or worse. “Smart, witty, perceptive . . . and almost always—in the best sense of the word—entertaining,” Snobbery provides the ultimate social commentary on arrogance in America (TheWashington Post Book World). It’s a book you shouldn’t be caught dead without.

A Literary Education
  • Language: en

A Literary Education

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014
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  • Publisher: Axios Press

A respected essayist whose work has appeared in The New Yorker and The Atlantic discusses the pleasure, often forgotten in the modern day, of reading something for no purpose whatsoever in his latest collection of writings.

Translating Intimacy in
  • Language: un

Translating Intimacy in "My Brother Eli" by Joseph Epstein

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Narcissus Leaves the Pool
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 340

Narcissus Leaves the Pool

Epstein's sixth collection of personal pieces winningly and brilliantly rounds off his 23-year tenure as editor of "The American Scholar". Among the topics covered are naps, Gershwin aging, name-dropping, long books, pet peeves, talent vs. genius, Anglophilia, and surgery--the head and the heart. Excerpted in "The New Yorker".

Distant Intimacy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 350

Distant Intimacy

Presents a dazzling, year-long, transatlantic correspondence between an American and British author who have never met and yet are still friends.