Making It
By Norman Podhoretz
Introduction by Terry Teachout
By Norman Podhoretz
Introduction by Terry Teachout
By Norman Podhoretz
Introduction by Terry Teachout
By Norman Podhoretz
Introduction by Terry Teachout
Part of NYRB Classics
Part of NYRB Classics
Category: Political Figure Biographies & Memoirs
Category: Political Figure Biographies & Memoirs
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Paperback $17.95
Apr 11, 2017 | ISBN 9781681370804
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Praise
“A frank and honest book…high-stepping brilliance…tactfully and touchingly revealing of the fearful ambitions of Podhoretz’s family…. Podhoretz has ‘allowed himself to be fully known’ and so may give the key to the B.Y.M. (Bright Young Men) of the next generation, which will allow them to shuck the iron mask of premature intellectual good taste and join in the common pursuit of self-knowledge and self-expression.” —Frederic Raphael, The New York Times
“This masterpiece of American autobiography is the tale of a striving, self-mythologized, and nearly Melvillean figure crashing toward his own salvation—and more…. Nearly 50 years on, it’s clear that, to paraphrase Dostoevsky on Gogol, we all come out from Podhoretz’s overcoat.” —Lee Smith, Tablet
“One can’t really understand the state of so-called highbrow culture today without first coming to terms with the career of Norman Podhoretz. Along with Jason and Barbara Epstein, Robert Silvers, Susan Sontag, Norman Mailer and a few others (the ‘children’ of Edmund Wilson, Lionel Trilling and Philip Rahv), Mr. Podhoretz reconceived the very idea of what it means to be an intellectual.” —Robert S. Boynton, The New York Observer
“Making It was a brave and original book.” —Robert Fulford, The Globe and Mail
“Podhoretz’s analysis of the power of the family is penetrating.” —Andrew M. Greeley, The Reporter
One can’t really understand the state of so-called highbrow culture today without first coming to terms with the career of Norman Podhoretz. Along with Jason and Barbara Epstein, Robert Silvers, Susan Sontag, Norman Mailer and a few others (the ‘children’ of Edmund Wilson, Lionel Trilling and Philip Rahv), Mr. Podhoretz reconceived the very idea of what it means to be an intellectual.
The New York Observer
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