Criticism

About Beckett

By Bob Borek | Nov 30th, 2007 | Category: Criticism

Samuel Beckett sympathized with lobsters. A female liaison told one of his biographers, James Knowlson, that when they would dine together at the Iles Marquis in Paris, they would always sit as far as possible from the trout and lobster tanks because of how much they upset “Sam.”
The detail appears in an early short [...]



The Absent Author: Sylvia Plath’s “A Birthday Present”

By Scott Coomes | Jun 8th, 2007 | Category: Criticism

One of the most ignored, but fundamental, issues when reading a text is the question of who is speaking. The problem seems simple and intuitive, but it becomes much more complicated when you realize the multiplicity of options. Is it the name on the spine of book? The character speaking the current bit of dialogue? [...]



Fiery & Vivid: V. S. Naipaul, Nikolai Gogol and the Illumination of Darkness

By Kevin Hilke | Feb 2nd, 2007 | Category: Criticism

So V.S. Naipaul finally gets the prize.
It’s said he’s willing, through unblinking eyes,
To make his observations, then recall
The bleakest Third World countries, warts and all.
While valuing his writing, I still think
It wouldn’t hurt if, now and then, he’d blink.
—Calvin Trillin, “On V. S. Naipaul’s Nobel Prize”
Nobel Prize-winning novelist V.S. Naipaul is a provocative and contentious [...]



In A Manner Of Speaking

By Frank Guan | Dec 20th, 2006 | Category: Criticism

Download “In A Manner Of Speaking” as a PDF.