From Library Journal
"If there is any overriding theme to this collection, I would say that it is one of exposure, pulling or coaxing out of the closet some of the many skeletons we habitually shove inside it." From confessing to the sexual pleasures of spanking ("Spanking: A Romance") to probing Jewish self-loathing in the shadow of the Holocaust ("Dreaming of Hitler: A Memoir of Self-Hatred"), essayist and novelist Merkin (Enchantment, LJ 8/96) dares to ferret out "what's going on under the [polite] surface." These reviews, profiles, and articles, previously published in such publications as The New Yorker, Tikkun, and Allure, are provocative in their subject matter, witty and graceful in their prose style. Great fun to read, they are also insightful and thought-provoking. There are a few misses here (the fluff piece on Donna Karan), but these are more than compensated by such stimulating essays as "A Complicated Friendship: Remembering Diana Trilling." Highly recommended for all collections.?Wilda Williams, "Library Journal"
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Merkin is blessed with the twin gifts of candor and restraint and with a supple prose style. She also possesses genuine chutzpah, bravely tackling extremely sensitive and complex issues associated with the arbitrariness and ambiguity of these fin-de-millennium times. An adept and intrepid interpreter of culture, Merkin writes about writers (Norman Mailer, Anne Sexton, the "Claire Bloom vs. Philip Roth" debacle), movies (Richard Burton and Martin Scorsese), fashion and body image, and how the media makes the private public in the wake of tragedy. Merkin moves into even more thickety and elusive subjects as she ponders the pervasiveness of ambivalence, the intractability of sexual desire (Merkin's essay on spanking caused quite a stir when it was first published in a different form in the
New Yorker), depression, the precariousness of marriage, and the curious self-loathing being Jewish in these post-Holocaust years can entail. Merkin's concentrated essays travel through the mind like meteors burning through the atmosphere: they give off a dazzling amount of illumination and heat.
Donna Seaman
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