Reviews

Quarrel & Quandary: Essays by Cynthia Ozick

takumo_n's review

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3.0

Very dry, but very insightful.

rissaleighs's review

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3.0

I skimmed across the surface of this one like a dragonfly. It's been on my to read list forever, and in a former life I might have gobbled it up. At the moment, though, it felt a little too intellectual. It is a collection of essays to sink teeth into, but I only have the appetite to nibble. I enjoyed the "Imaginary People"one, though.

rebeccahussey's review

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4.0

Quarrel and Quandary, a collection of essays, is the first book by Cynthia Ozick that I’ve read, and I finished it feeling impressed. Perhaps what stands out most strongly to me is her serious, firm, no-nonsense, occasionally devastating argumentation style. I would not ever want to be the subject of Ozick’s critique; she can be frighteningly effective when goes on the attack.

The essays cover a range of material. Many of them are literary in nature, including essays on Kafka, Dostoevsky, Sebald, Henry James, and others. Other essays explore broader literary phenomena such as the various adaptations of The Diary of Anne Frank and the treatment of the Holocaust in fiction. These last two are good examples of what I mean by her devastating argumentation style; she is angry at theatrical adaptations of the diary that downplay the horror of Anne’s fate in order to focus on the diary’s hopeful messages. In the essay on Holocaust fiction, she critiques Sophie’s Choice and Bernard Schlink’s The Reader for covering over some of the worst aspects of Holocaust history by focusing on exceptions and rare cases in the stories they tell. That essay (which you can read here) is a nuanced discussion of the tension between the right of authors to write about whatever they want and their responsibility to be ethical human beings.

Read the rest of the review at Of Books and Bicycles.
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