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Benjamin's Crossing [Hardcover]

Jay Parini (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 1997
A fictional re-creation of the life and times of intellectual, philosopher, and critic Walter Benjamin follows his intriguing life up to his final days, when he was forced to flee Paris ahead of the 1940 Nazi invasion. Tour.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Parini's engaging novel of intellectual and personal history re-imagines the life of essayist and philosopher Walter Benjamin, one of this century's most brilliant literary and cultural critics. Benjamin, a German Jew forced into exile by Hitler, was not well-known at the time of his suicide in 1940 but in recent years has gained widespread admiration in academic circles for his subtle insights into the nature of literature. Parini's story, written in the voice of Benjamin's real-life longtime friend, Gershom Scholem, the scholar of Jewish mysticism, follows Benjamin on his tragic yet amazing journey to escape the increasingly dangerous Europe--all the while writing a 1000-page manuscript that would become his life's masterwork.

From Library Journal

In this fascinating novel, novelist and critic Parini (Bay of Arrows, LJ 8/92), a professor at Middlebury, profiles the last few months in the life of critic and philosopher Walter Benjamin, who escaped Paris just ahead of the Nazi invasion in 1940. Told largely from the perspective of the various intellectuals and radicals that made up Benjamin's circle, the novel depicts Benjamin as a man who possessed a brilliant mind but was tragically unaware of and uninterested in the political state of the world around him. Most importantly, Parini's Benjamin is utterly human. The novel gives the uninitiated some insight into Benjamin's philosophy and may inspire them to delve into his writings, which were underappreciated in his own day but are now revered by many academics. Recommended for all literary collections.?Christine DeZelar-Tiedman, Univ. of Idaho Lib., Moscow
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 306 pages
  • Publisher: Henry Holt & Company; 1st edition (May 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0805031804
  • ISBN-13: 978-0805031805
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,307,884 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jay Parini is Axinn Professor of English at Middlebury College, Vermont. His six novels also include Benjamins Crossing and The Apprentice Lover. His volumes of poetry include The Art of Subtraction: New and Selected Poems. In addition to biographies of John Steinbeck, Robert Frost and William Faulkner, he has written a volume of essays on literature and politics, as well as The Art of Teaching. He edited the Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature and writes regularly for the Guardian and other publications.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "The European mind has lost its champion...its prince.", September 5, 2002
This review is from: Benjamin's Crossing (Hardcover)
When Walter Benjamin, a German Jew, died in Spain during World War II, Europe was deprived of "the most subtle mind of [his] generation." Benjamin, a philosopher, historian, and literary critic, was a colleague of some of Europe's most influential thinkers during the period between the two world wars. Deeply involved in the intellectual aspects of history, Benjamin, however, became a prisoner of the world of ideas, a man who neither understood nor recognized the immediate political realities of the Nazi threat, preferring to sit "in glory above the fray, on an alabaster cloud." Refusing to leave Paris until almost all avenues of escape were closed, Benjamin's indecisiveness about escape and his insistence on toting his 1000-page manuscript on the history of Parisian arcades may have cost him his life.

Parini's imagery here is often stunning, and his prose so smooth it is almost melodic in its flow. Using several points of view, he allows Benjamin's friends and acquaintances to recall episodes in Benjamin life, creating emotional power from their reminiscences after Benjamin's death in Spain. First-person accounts by Lisa Fittko, a real person who helped Benjamin and others escape through the Pyrenees into Spain, are particularly powerful, giving immediacy and drama to Benjamin's attempted escape on foot. Quotations from Benjamin's own philosophical writing give a sense of reality to a man who otherwise refused to become engaged in the realities of his time.

Unfortunately, Benjamin himself is phlegmatic, and Parini is often forced to "tell about" his life, rather than recreating it for the reader. Because he is distanced, both by his own personality and Parini's narrative style, Benjamin never really comes to life as do his friends, such as Fittko, Jewish mystic Gershom Scholem, and Russian Marxist Asja Lacis, who, in addressing us directly, create scenes which are full of vitality. Still, this novel about Benjamin as "the European Mind writ large" is endlessly fascinating, a thoughtful eulogy for all that has been lost to posterity. Mary Whipple
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Marxist Magic Lanternist comes to life, April 11, 2000
By 
Carl J. Bromley (Forest Hills, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Benjamin's Crossing (Hardcover)
This is a book that I turned to with some scepticism. I admire Jay Parini enormously as a poet, novelist and essayist but this new project: to "novelize" Benjamin's last years seemed excessively ambitiousess. How do you add flesh and bones to this melancholic man of letters, this Marxist rabbi or magic lanternist as some have described? What can be added to Benjamin's own work, his letters and the reflections written by friends and comrades? Well Benjamin's Crossing is both a marvellous, magical and intensely moving novel. Parini gives Benjamin a sexual and emotional life which sensously combines with Benjamin's mental life. By the end of the novel I was so immersed in the figure of Benjamin, so moved by him, that I wanted Parini to re-write history, which of course he could not. If there are any ambitious filmmakers out there this would make a compelling and yet daunting movie.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Experience the denial and the reality of persecution., October 7, 1997
This review is from: Benjamin's Crossing (Hardcover)
It is difficult to accept the reality that you are not a 'desirable' person because you are of a different religion. Denial is the first escape mechanism that many turn to for their reason to live. So it was with Walter Benjamin, a German Jewish intellectual living in post-Weimar Germany. His attitude to the popularity and growth of Hitler and his Nazi 'cronies' was that they would not last long and that their blatant anti-Semitism was a "passing phase". Benjamin beloved that because he was part of the 'literati' he was above the ostracizing, beatings, killings and deportations to concentration camps that the 'other' Jews were experiencing. To Benjamin, his works and his research would save him from the fate of the 'other' Jews. When reality finally took hold of him in Paris, France, in 1939, Benjamin, who had been detained by the French "for his own good" finally realized that he must escape the city he loved in order to see his life's work published. Through his old associates and his unconscious need to relocate to the Jewish Homeland of Palestine, Benjamin planned his escape through Spain to Palestine. The trip through "Vichy" France is as 'first person' an adventure as one would want to experience without the actual 'smell and feel' of that experience. Benjamin's "juvenile" belief that he would be saved because he was an intellectual and totally apolitical proved to be a false notion. He, like all other Jews throughout Europe, became expendable to the Nazi killers. The loss of such a vital, intellectual person, at his own hand, is a show of how many Jews throughout Europe felt about their futures. That death by their own hands was more palatable than a slow death at the hands of the Nazi executioners. For all those readers who either know of Walter Benjamin's writings, his personal life or are curious about who he was, this book (even though it is fictional) is a great introduction to this most interesting man, his personal relationships and his writings.
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First Sentence:
Port-Bou, Spain: 1950. Here I stand, a man who did not even weep at the death of his own parents, weeping for Walter Benjamin, my dear lost friend. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Old Benjamin, Henny Gurland, Frau Gurland, Walter Benjamin, New York, Professor Lott, Fonda Franca, Asja Lacis, Madame Ruiz, Frau Fittko, Great War, Sergeant Consuelo, Herr Benjamin, Hans Fittko, Heymann Stein, General Franco, Teddy Adorno, Youth Movement, Hannah Arendt, Herr Scholem, Elective Affinities, Jula Cohn, Julie Farendot, Frau Ourland, Gerhard Scholem
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