Benjamin's Crossing

Benjamin's Crossing is a 1996 historical novel written by Jay Parini about the Jewish critic and philosopher Walter Benjamin, and his escape over the Pyrenees from Nazi occupied France into Spain. It was a New York Times Notable Book of the year in 1997.[1]

Benjamin's Crossing
First edition cover
AuthorJay Parini
LanguageEnglish
PublisherHolt Paperbacks
Publication date
July 15, 1996

Praise

  • The New York Times "Parini's story is at once painstakingly researched and dramatically recounted. It locates Benjamin's mystifying traits in a vivid and believable psychology. And it has something important to tell us, not just about Benjamin but about the role of the intellectual in modern Western society."
  • The New Yorker "A brisk, moving novel containing a parable without confining itself to a parable's two-dimensionality."
  • Booklist: "Parini's vital and affecting vision of Benjamin will do much to preserve Benjamin's precious legacy."
  • Publishers Weekly "In a formidable display of intellectual and imaginative sympathy, Parini novelizes the life and death of Walter Benjamin, one of the major literary and cultural critics of the twentieth century."
  • The Philadelphia Inquirer "Parini's exquisite achievement-and exquisite is exactly the word for his poet's fluid prose-is that the social criticism he channels through Walter Benjamin in this novel is as troubling today as then."
  • Kirkus Reviews "A moving, impressively informed novel based on the life of one of the century's most austere, provocative, and tragic intellectuals, Walter Benjamin."

References

  1. "Notable Books of the Year 1997". The New York Times. 7 December 1997.



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.