BOOKS - NB by J. C.: A Walk through the Times Literary Supplement
US $7.48
973578
973578
NB by J. C.: A Walk through the Times Literary Supplement
Author: James Campbell
Year: January 1, 2023
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 3.4 MB
Language: English
Year: January 1, 2023
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 3.4 MB
Language: English
NB by J. C. , a collection of James Campbell's best columns from the TLS , is a guide to the literary pleasures and absurdities of the past two decades.For over twenty years, James Campbell wrote the popular NB column on the back page of The Times Literary Supplement , signing it "J. C." The initials were not intended as a disguise, but to provide freedom to the persona. "J. C." was irreverent, whimsical, occasionally severe. The column had a low tolerance for the literary sins of pomposity, hypocrisy, and cant. It took aim at contemporary absurdities resulting from identity politics or from academic jargon. Readers of NB by J. C. will find not only an off-beat guide to our cultural times, but entries from The TLS Reviewer's Handbook, which offered regular advice on the cultivation of a good writing style. "Above all, aspire to the Three E' elegance, eloquence, and entertainment." The Introduction offers a history of the TLS from its beginnings through its precarious stages of adaptation and survival."The secret of J. C.'s weekly column is its unique mix of anonymity with this 'stranger', whom we meet over our morning coffee, is the most discreet and delightful of guides to what's happening-good or mostly bad-in the literary world, with all its pretensions, follies, and occasional triumphs. I especially relished J. C.'s prizes-for the worst prose or the silliest blurb. Then again, leave it to J. C. to find the rare edition, the forgotten book of poems that deserves another look. True wit, coupled with it's the rarest of writerly feats."- Marjorie Perloff, author of The Vienna A Memoir "I receive immense pleasure from J. C.'s columns. Something more than warmth, laughter, gratitude (especially when he is nailing academic unreadability)." - Vivian Gornick, author of Unfinished Notes of a Chronic Re-Reader and "For many years, Campbell appeared each week in the Times Literary Supplement , where his back-page essay - ironic, bookish and irresistibly entertaining - was every subscriber's favorite feature. and " - Michael Dirda, Washington Post, on James Campbell's NB column