Reseña de New York Review of Books
AT THE EXISTENTIALIST CAFÉ: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails, by Sarah Bakewell. (Other Press, $17.95.) Bakewell's history, one of the Book Review's 10 Best Books of 2016, serves as a collective biography of a half-dozen preeminent existentialist philosophers, including Heidegger, Sartre and de Beauvoir. Her lucid account has a particular focus on the political and moral crises of the 1930s and '40s that shaped her subjects' work. LITTLE NOTHING, by Marisa Silver. (Blue Rider Press, $16.) In this grown-up fairy tale, Pavla is born a dwarf, but over time shifts into a wolf girl; the man who built a torturous device to stretch her to a normal size loves her from afar in all her dysmorphic forms. As our reviewer, Matt Bell, put it, the novel "traces how memories and the stories we tell shape who we are and what we are capable of becoming." WHO KILLED THESE GIRLS?: The Unsolved Murders That Rocked a Texas Town, by Beverly Lowry. (Vintage, $8.99.) In December 1991, the bodies of four teenagers were found in the Austin, Tex., frozen-yogurt store where they worked - naked, bound, gagged and burned. Nearly 20 years later, Lowry becomes interested in the crime and recounts with a novelist's pace all the facts and unresolved questions of the case. A THOUSAND MILES FROM NOWHERE, by John Gregory Brown. (Lee Boudreaux/Back Bay/Little, Brown, $15.99.) Henry Garrett - divorced, out of a job and out of money - left New Orleans as Hurricane Katrina approached, finding unexpected solace in a small Virginia town. After he becomes involved in the accidental death of a black inmate, he is stranded at the hotel where he has been staying; an unlikely friendship forged there empowers him to return home and atone for his previous misdeeds. PLAY ALL: A Bingewatcher's Notebook, by Clive James. (Yale, $13.) While fighting leukemia, James - a critic, scholar and former television critic - takes to watching, with his daughter as a companion. The resulting collection of essays, centered on notable series from "The Sopranos" to "Breaking Bad," brims with affection: for the arts, for criticism and for life itself. THE MORTIFICATIONS, by Derek Palacio. (Tim Duggan, $16.) A novel detailing a Cuban family's exodus draws on ancient Greek themes. In praising Palacio's "extraordinary" writing, our reviewer, Dinaw Mengestu, wrote: "This restlessness of Palacio's approach - roaming across physical and cultural borders, borrowing and revising as he sees fit - allows him to tread on territory most American writers are reluctant to touch."
Reseña de Choise
Bakewell (Univ. of Oxford, UK) laces together the lives of many of the major and minor figures responsible for existentialism, the philosophical view that holds that one's experiential existence is of utmost importance for action and reflection. The main proponents of the movement, Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, pulled various strands of philosophy and other art forms together into a set of compelling personal life strategies. The problem has always been in the details: just what is involved in an existentialist life? Bakewell does a magnificent job connecting the personal events in thinkers' lives with their philosophical views without oversimplifying or avoiding existentialism's inherent ambiguity. However, what can seem like biographical voyeurism may seem irrelevant to the project of evaluating existentialist propositions. Still, the stories of these people are interesting if not always riveting, and readers will find it much easier to grapple with the challenging material when it is presented in this form (as distinguished from going to the primary sources). Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; general readers. --Phil Jenkins, Marywood University
Library Journal Review
"What is existentialism anyway?" asks Bakewell in her tremendous new work, and you're wrong if you find that question irrelevant to your life. As articulated by Jean-Paul Sartre and his confreres, existentialism is so wound up in contemporary culture that we think it, speak it, and encounter it daily-consider, for instance, those moody existential film heroes and the angst driving our self-improvement schemes. After completing her National Book Critics Circle Award winner, How To Live: Or A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer, Bakewell ambitiously launched on a project to revisit this passion of her youth. Along with her rigorous and clarifying explanations of existentialism as project, sensibility, and evolution from the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger (finally, you'll understand what all these philosophers were talking about), she offers refreshing reaction and context that make this book a journey for the reader as well as the writer. Though she focuses on the philosophy, Bakewell also probes biography, detailing the relationship between Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, for instance, and taking Heidegger's Nazi associations head-on. There's humanizing cheekiness, too; after explaining how each philosopher fell out with a predecessor, Bakewell adds, "Arthur Koestler fell out with everyone and punched Camus in the street." VERDICT Highly recommended for anyone who thinks. [See "Editors' Spring Picks," p. 29.]-Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.