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SEIZING DESTINY THE CRITICAL RESPONSE |
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* KIRKUS SERVICE [starred review]: “A Pulitzer Prize winner comprehensively
documents * PUBLISHERS WEEKLY: “Each chapter of
this long, absorbing book is rewarding as Kluger meets the high standard set
by his earlier work.” * AMERICAN HERITAGE: “Kluger’s writing exhibits the clarity that
won him a Pulitzer Prize for Ashes to Ashes, his 1997 book about the
cigarette industry…. Kluger’s unconventional focus …will teach readers [to]
see many familiar events in new ways.” * |
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“This is a magisterial account of a monumental
subject. Nothing less than the acquisition and occupation of – JOSEPH
J. ELLIS, author of Founding Brothers |
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* NEWSDAY: “[Kluger] is master of a kind of sweeping
but detailed historical synthesis that is held together through the force of
a lively but unobtrusive prose style…. Kluger avoids the temptation – all too
contemporary and American, perhaps – to reduce everything to the level of a
personality profile. His canvas is
huge (you need a while to take it all in) and even the grandest architects of
the nation’s growth never quite loom * * * |
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“Writing with uncommon brio and without
illusions, Richard Kluger brilliantly tells the epic tale of how the – DAVID M.
KENNEDY, author of Freedom from Fear, winner
of the Pulitzer Prize |
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* * THE * THE NEW YORK TIMES: “Mr. Kluger writes with great verve and
knows how to turn a phrase…” * * |
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“This is history on a grand scale. Kluger has created an overarching narrative
without scanting the drama of individual episodes…. An important book and a timely one.” – JUSTIN
KAPLAN, author of Mr. Clemens and Mark
Twain and winner of the Pulitzer Prize |
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* * * THE |
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“In Seizing Destiny, Richard Kluger has
given us a vivid narrative of just how British colonials and then citizens of
a new nation swept aside everything in their path as they spread their
dominion from the – DAN T.
CARTER, author of Scottsboro and The Politics of Rage |
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After an unaccountably scathing review of Seizing
Destiny in the |
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A Different Drummer To
the Editor: I must confess to a moment of churlishness when, after
being lulled by your reviewer's discussion of my book “Seizing Destiny” (Aug.
12), I was awakened by the artful thrust of the hired assassin’s knife. In
the next to last paragraph, Richard Brookhiser wrote: “I cannot recommend
this book, however. Kluger's writing is some of the worst I have ever had to
read. … If I had not agreed to review this book, I would have stopped after
five pages. After 600, I felt as if I were inside a bass drum banged on by a
clown.” But rather than childishly taking offense at what I
interpreted as a gentle rebuke, I soon realized how dutiful – brave, even –
the reviewer had been in soldiering on after those first five thoroughly
nauseating pages. He even kindly illustrated my utter ineptitude by singling
out this sentence 1 had written on the French Revolution: “French grievances
were vented in alternating waves of liberation and repression that swept the
overwrought masses toward the cauldron of anarchy.” How could I have
butchered the English language so grievously? Suddenly I understood how mistaken the Book Review's critic had been about my last book, “Ashes to Ashes;” in his highly laudatory review‑and how besotted the jurors were who voted it the Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction, not usually awarded to wretched writers (I being the fortunate exception). How foolish, I thought, the Times columnist Bob Herbert had been for referring to my “Simple Justice” as a “brilliant and powerful book.” And how blind the former Times reporter Anthony Lukas, a garlanded book author, had been for |
stating
that my book “The Paper: The Life and Death of The New York Herald Tribune”
was “probably the best book ever written about an American newspaper … a
brilliant piece of social history.” And how insensitive to hideous prose were
the judges who placed both those books among the five finalists for the
National Book Award in history for the years in which they were issued. Here at last, I appreciatively recognized, was a
critic astute and forthright enough to do for me what no other reviewer had
done before: tell me I am a clown, not a writer. How sad 1 was for the
publisher of my four books of social history, Alfred A. Knopf, which has
gained its eminence by bringing out books by similarly dreadful authors. How
bad I felt for the four eminent writers and scholars – Joseph Ellis, David
Kennedy, Justin Kaplan and Dan T. Carter – who had unaccountably offered
admiring words about “Seizing Destiny” for the back of the book jacket. And
how insensitive Kirkus was for calling it, in a starred prepublication
review, “brilliant”. Rather than continue writing, I will henceforth
devote my energies to mastering one or another percussion instrument (if not
the drum, on which your reviewer seems to feel 1 have a head start). It was
an honor to be so subtly awakened from my self‑deception by Mr.
Brookhiser, who has honed his own skills by laboring for 30 years on the
staff of National Review, a beacon of insightful commentary as well as fair
and balanced judgment. Thanks, too, to your staff for selecting him. As we
say out here to RICHARD KLUGER |
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