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BOOK OF THE WEEK
Our Montaigne
Joseph Epstein is back with another collection of superb essays.
Reviewed by Scot McKnight | posted 9/10/2007



For two weeks, the last thing I did before I found my way to bed was place Joseph Epstein's In a Cardboard Belt! on Daniel de Roulet's hope–filled book Finding Your Plot in a Plotless World. Most nights, as I shuffled through the dark to our bedroom, I also wondered for some odd reason how I'd vary the title of Epstein's book in light of de Roulet's. I've landed upon this for the title for any collection of Epstein's essays but especially this new one: The Undiscovered Plot in (What Might Be, Who Knows?) a Plotted World.

In a Cardboard Belt! Essays Personal, Literary, and Savage
By Joseph Epstein
Houghton Mifflin
410 pp.; $26

I'm routinely stunned when I ask fellow academics if they read Epstein and they reply with "Who is he?" My answer, always and forever: "America's finest essayist." I was once in that crowd of "Who is Joseph Epstein?" readers until my colleague, Sonia Bodi, whose recommendations I have always followed, said to me, "I've found a book for you. It's by Joseph Epstein. Narcissus Leaves the Pool: Familiar Essays." I bought it, read it, and became a convert. That was 1999. In the year 2000 I read ten of Epstein's books and have never had a better year reading. Still, his writing isn't known as well as it deserves to be. As he puts it, "I am ready to settle for being known as a good writer by thoughtful people." Why does he settle for such non–fame? Perhaps because he reads differently: "Do many people still read—as I do—looking for secrets, for hitherto hidden secrets that will open too–long–locked doors?"

In a Cardboard Belt! collects Epstein's essays from the last few years. As usual, they are filled with wit and gossip and put–downs and no final answers to serious questions. Some are familiar essays (a division of personal essays in the tradition of Michel Montaigne, Charles Lamb, and William Hazlitt, which Epstein defines as a "line out for a walk"), some literary, and some about the intellectual life. But the sensational section of In a Cardboard Belt! is what he calls "Savage." Here one finds Epstein irony fueled by animus against such notables as Mortimer Adler and Harold Bloom as well as George Steiner and Edmund Wilson but also the dubious post of poet laureate for the United States. To Bloom's claim that he never revises his prose, Epstein adds that "nothing in his work refutes this impressive claim." And he says of Bloom that his "books sell without being actually read." Indeed, Mr. Epstein, that's savage.

Epstein turned The American Scholar into what it was (note the past tense), namely, a collection of the finest essays in the land, many personal and familiar. As reported in the last essay, the 92nd, he wrote for The American Scholar and rounding off In a Cardboard Belt!, Epstein was pushed off the dock by the politically correct clamor in the Phi Beta Kappa society, which owns the journal. They handed the leadership over to another fine essayist, Anne Fadiman, whose leadership also seemed not to have cut the right figure and whose own essays are now gathered into a bundle in At Large and At Small. When the new editor took over, he converted the once delightfully distinctive American Scholar into what is now yet another political commentary—and I closed my checkbook on the journal. I do what I can to find Epstein's pieces in magazines like Commentary, The New Criterion, The Hudson Review, and Nexus.

What got Epstein into trouble? Nothing much. His panache, his élan, his sardonic wit—in short, his genius and the reason I like his essays. "Life is not, after all," he observes with a penchant for speaking his unpopular mind, "a Barbra Streisand song. People who need people, I have discovered, are not usually the luckiest people of all." He didn't even need The American Scholar people. Sometimes he received letters from angry feminists who didn't think he published enough feminists. "I generally answered such letters by remarking that I thought myself without prejudice in this matter, that I was interested only in getting the best possible copy into the magazine, and that I would run good writing produced by a hermaphroditic zebra." Letters like that in the hands of the wrong person can get an editor in trouble.




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