If only Bloom had panned Infinite Jest, I might have taken the plunge. But several other influential critics give it a thumbs down:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinit...ical_reception
If only Bloom had panned Infinite Jest, I might have taken the plunge. But several other influential critics give it a thumbs down:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinit...ical_reception
For me, with writers like Amis, McEwan, Eggars, and Franzen, it's as if we've shrugged off the obscurities of high and post-modernism, returned to the Dickensian mainstream, and made serious reading enjoyable again.
I also feel that Rushdie is playing a role of "sophisticated man of letters", but I consider him to be following in this experimental, and rather tedious, pursuit in the company of Faulkner and Joyce. I don't want any of them on my list!
One good idea that came with post-modernism is that there is no "one tradition", that different pools of readers live in totally different environments, separate from each other, finding totally different things enjoyable, and forever disagreeing on "what's best". This seems to agree with my experience.
This divergence of opinion, of course, makes it very difficult to agree on a top fifty list!
In any case, thanks for reminding me about McEwan, I think he should be on the list with Saturday.