Hypocrisy seems a bit harsh... Inconsistency at the most, that apology was mostly for propriety's sake. I really wanted to share my annoyance with Bloom, I never claimed otherwise. I probably should have waited until after work to post because at the moment I'm peering over my shoulder trying to look busy with work and thus find it hard to concentrate. What I intended to put across was an admiration for some of Bloom's work but annoyance with his attitude, and I sort of got derailed and just attacked him. Anyway, I do think Bloom's arrogance is detrimental to "high literature" because he makes it seem really inaccessible to people below is particular wavelength.
He has probably read more than most readers, and this makes his opinions more important.
I just read David Lindsay's "A Voyage To Arcturus" which is available on librivox.com and its introduction said that Bloom loved this book so much that he actually wrote a sequel to it called "Voyage to Lucifer" or something like that, and that this is Bloom's sole work of fiction, which he has since disowned and not allowed to be reprinted. I wonder if anyone on this forum has read it, and if so, what was it like? Lindsay's novel was an interesting if somewhat bizzarre Schopenhauerian allegory.
Last edited by Des Essientes; 07-12-2011 at 12:50 AM. Reason: spelling mistakes
I think I read two or three books by Bloom all of which I have mostly forgotten except for the commentaries in The Book of J. Somewhere in those other books he suggests that J was Solomon's mother, Bathsheba.
Whatever anyone has to say about Bloom, his ideas about J, and the link to Bathsheba, I find valuable.
I am in the middle of Bloom's Genius--Bloom's list of the top 100--written at age 71. Maybe slight fall from quality offrom Shakespeare Invention of The Human and Western Canon. still excellent and interesting. Few could write this and say they read all 100. Occasional irritation with Bloom continually rhapsodizing over this and that, and, by my account rare misses for Bloom here and there where he's yet to read, such as e.g. Walter Arndt's Goethe translation or On The Edge of Reason by Mirslav Krleza that rivals Kafka's The Trial.