WRESTLING WITH OLD HEROES--AGAIN
Fourteen Familiar Letters on Classic American Literature
by
Book Details
About the Book
In Wrestling with Old Heroes—Again, Green re-engages with a series of favorite authors in a lifetime of reading and teaching—Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Poe, Hawthorne, Melville, and Emily Dickinson—aiming here to share his experience, and theirs, not as a professional literary critic but as the amateur he has always remained, in what he calls “familiar letters” addressed to literate amateurs like himself who read for the sheer love of it—and in this case out of a particular interest in how these very individual writers handled the stretches and strains involved in what Emerson called the “fall of man” into modern consciousness.
BOOK REVIEW
"Letters on Dead White Mostly Male Writers in the American 19th Century.
In the forward, Green jokes of having considered and rejected the above title for his collection of letters
on Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Poe, Hawthorne, Melville and Dickinson. It’s appropriate, of course, with six
of the seven authors being male and all of them white. A professor of English since 1964, Green doesn’t stick
to a tenure track style in these essays—written in the manner of letters addressed to a family member or
friend—he weaves an interesting course in and out of this rich literary landscape. Blunt candor and clarity
trump lit-crit pretense—the author is simply interested in elaborating on the essences that make each writer
worthy of his or her greatness and Green’s admiration. He lays the book’s foundation with transcendentalists
Emerson and Thoreau, then moves on to the ebullient Whitman, romantic Hawthorn, epic Melville and daunting
Dickinson, often providing the proper historical and intellectual context for each writer, as well as how and to
what extent they influenced one another. The authors frequently speak for themselves, with Green quoting
passages of each work discussed. The author set out on this quixotic adventure in amateurish criticism, and
while he might hogtie small works like Thoreau’s “On Civil Disobedience,” he can’t possibly pin down Moby Dick. But that was never Green’s
objective. After reading this book, one will likely get the urge to dust off an old copy of Walden or The Scarlet Letter, or set out to a used book
store in search of a collection of Emerson’s essays. That was the author’s aim, and he has succeeded.
A critical sampling of important American authors that arouses the appetite."
--Kirkus Discoveries
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discoveries@kirkusreviews.com
About the Author
A professor of English at the University of Cincinnati (1964-68) and Chicago State University (1968-94 and now emeritus), Jesse Green holds advanced degrees from the University of California at Berkeley (M.A., 1957) and Northwestern University (l972). His publications include two books: Zuni: Selected Writings of Frank Hamilton Cushing (University of Nebraska, 1979; paperback still in print) and Cushing at Zuni: The Correspondence and Journals of Frank Hamilton Cushing, 1879–1884 (University of New Mexico, 1990), and numerous articles on Cushing, Conrad, Melville, Whitman and William Carlos Williams, and others in journals such as The New York Review of Books, Modern Fiction Studies, and Contemporary American Literature