Reading Myself and Others

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Wikidata image Reading Myself and Others (1975) is an anthology of essays, interviews and criticism by the author Philip Roth. The first half of the book is built mainly upon Roth's assessment of his own published works at the time of the anthology's publication. The second half of the volume consists of essays and introductions by Roth about other authors. Many of the essays were occasioned by the abrupt fame and scrutinyScript error: No such module "Unsubst". which came to Roth upon the publication of his storm-provoking fourth novel, Portnoy's Complaint (1969).[1] In the "Author's Note", Roth writes that the selections in the book "are largely the by-products of getting started as a novelist, and then of taking stock."[2]

Reading Myself includes interviews of Roth conducted by other authors as well as several essays in which Roth attempts to answer some of the critics of his early works. Among the interviews, one was conducted by the author Joyce Carol Oates about Roth's novel The Breast (1972). Appropriate to the book's title, Roth even conducts a self-interview about the origins and intentions of his work. Reading Myself also includes a letter that Roth wrote, but never sent, to the literary critic Diana Trilling in response to her dismissive review of Portnoy's Complaint;[3] Trilling found Portnoy "lacking", but Roth found Trilling's reasoning as lacking too.[4][5]

Notes

  1. Brauner (2005), p.47
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  3. Roth's letter to Trilling, dated July 27, 1969, was also published in literary magazine Five Dials, in Number 9: The Fiction Issue, as An Interruption: Writer vs Critic #4, pp.34-6
  4. Diana Trilling (1969) The uncomplaining homosexuals, Harper's Magazine, August 1969
  5. Wyatt Mason (2008) Weekend Read: Roth’s (Justified) Complaint, or “Document Dated July 27, 1969”, Harper's Magazine, June 2008

References

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