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American & Canadian Literature, General & Miscellaneous Literary Criticism, English Literature
Playing It By Ear by William H. Pritchard β€” book cover

Playing It By Ear

by William H. Pritchard, David Ford
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Overview

This volume gathers together thirty-three essays and reviews by one of America's liveliest critics. Also included in the book are amusing reflections on William H. Pritchard's adventures as a soap opera fan and on the art of writing hostile reviews.

Synopsis

This volume gathers together thirty-three essays and reviews by one of America's liveliest critics. Also included in the book are amusing reflections on William H. Pritchard's adventures as a soap opera fan and on the art of writing hostile reviews.

Publishers Weekly

Best known for his biographies of Robert Frost and Randall Jarrell, Pritchard provides in this volume a refreshing variety of essays. Most focus on 20th-century poets and novelists, but other more personal essays deal with Pritchard's philosophy of teaching and his efforts to save a television soap opera from cancellation. Unapologetically old-fashioned in his defense of the literary canon, Pritchard nevertheless praises such lesser-known writers as British novelist Elizabeth Taylor. In a section on poets, he questions the inflated reputation of John Ashbery while defending John Updike's largely ignored verse. Pritchard's 1976 attack on ``the hermeneutical mafia'' (Harold Bloom, Geoffrey Hartman and other deconstructionist critics at Yale) is badly dated but remains a delightful display of wit. Throughout the volume (and especially in his essay on gender studies by Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar), Pritchard passionately rejects any form of reductionist criticism that sacrifices the experience of literature to a political agenda. He is highly skilled in polemics, but his criticism of others is usually tempered by self-deprecating humor, and his distinctive voice remains free of solemn academic jargon. (Dec.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Best known for his biographies of Robert Frost and Randall Jarrell, Pritchard provides in this volume a refreshing variety of essays. Most focus on 20th-century poets and novelists, but other more personal essays deal with Pritchard's philosophy of teaching and his efforts to save a television soap opera from cancellation. Unapologetically old-fashioned in his defense of the literary canon, Pritchard nevertheless praises such lesser-known writers as British novelist Elizabeth Taylor. In a section on poets, he questions the inflated reputation of John Ashbery while defending John Updike's largely ignored verse. Pritchard's 1976 attack on ``the hermeneutical mafia'' (Harold Bloom, Geoffrey Hartman and other deconstructionist critics at Yale) is badly dated but remains a delightful display of wit. Throughout the volume (and especially in his essay on gender studies by Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar), Pritchard passionately rejects any form of reductionist criticism that sacrifices the experience of literature to a political agenda. He is highly skilled in polemics, but his criticism of others is usually tempered by self-deprecating humor, and his distinctive voice remains free of solemn academic jargon. (Dec.)

Library Journal

Believing that the literary critic should help the common reader hear the poem or novel itself, Pritchard (Randall Jarrell: A Literary Life, LJ 2/1/90) takes witty and cogent potshots at Yale guru Harold Bloom and colleagues ("The Hermeneutical Mafia") and some feminist critics ("Salvos from the Gender War") for ideological excesses that warp a work by bending it to critics' agendas. He eschews current academic fashion and offers refreshingly independent judgments of such poets as Frost, Eliot, MacLeish, Spender, Larkin, Lowell, and Updike (whose poetry he is almost alone in treating); novelists Lawrence, Ford, Faulkner, Vidal, and Trollope (in whom he finds unrecognized merit); and critics Santayana, Mencken, F.R. Leavis, and Helen Vendler. Written mostly for the Hudson Review, these 33 brief essays reveal a lively, provocative mind. Highly recommended for readers conversant with modern British/American literature.-Charles C. Nash, Cottey Coll., Nevada, Mo.

Booknews

A collection of 33 of Pritchard's essays and reviews on novelists, poets, and critics. Subjects include Robert Frost, Sylvia Plath, Gore Vidal, soap operas, and the art of writing hostile reviews. Many of the pieces have appeared over the past 30 years in the New York Times Book Review, the Hudson Review, and the Boston Sunday Globe. Lacks an index. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
December 1, 1994
Publisher
University of Massachusetts Press
Pages
288
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780870239489

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