Writers & Books
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Essay-Review: In the Beginning, There Was Marilynne Robinson — Her new book, Reading Genesis, treats the Bible like a perfectly plotted historical novel. By Briallen Hopper

Essay-Review: In the Beginning, There Was Marilynne Robinson — Her new book, Reading Genesis, treats the Bible like a perfectly plotted historical novel. By Briallen Hopper | Writers & Books | Scoop.it
Illustration by Colin Verdi
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About the essayist: Briallen Hopper (@briallenhopper) is a professor of English at Queens College, City University of New York, and the author of Hard to Love: Essays and Confessions. She is writing a book about Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead.
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Essay: Reflections on the Humanities, Their Value and Perception of Them - by Marilynne Robinson

Essay: Reflections on the Humanities, Their Value and Perception of Them - by Marilynne Robinson | Writers & Books | Scoop.it
I have been reading lately about the rise of humanism in Europe. The old scholars often described themselves as “ravished” by one of the books newly made available to them by the press, perhaps also by translation. Their lives were usually short, never comfortable. I think about what it would have been like to read by the light of an oil lamp, to write with a goose quill. It used to seem to me that an unimaginable self-discipline must account for their meticulous learnedness. I assumed that the rigors and austerities of their early training had made their discomforts too familiar to be noticed. Now increasingly I think they were held to their work by a degree of fascination, of sober delight, that we can no longer imagine.
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Is it just me, or are Robinson's essays increasingly bloated windbags of nothingness, rambling away - darting off into tangents - barely making a compelling point, and often making the same one repeatedly in different disguises? I long instead for the sustained, almost near-clinical focus of her fiction in her approach to her essays...
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