Roth's Wars: A Career in Conflict
By (Author) James D. Bloom
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
12th July 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
813.54
Hardback
188
Width 160mm, Height 228mm, Spine 21mm
467g
Treating Philip Roth as a war writeras well as a sportswriter, crime reporter, political commentator, and Newark chroniclerRoths Wars: A Career in Conflict offers a thoroughly researched account of the novelists preoccupation with wars around the world and wars at home. This wide-ranging social and cultural history of Roths career examines intersections between Roths preoccupations as a writer and the work of contemporaries, such as J.D. Salinger, Joan Didion, George Plimpton, Hannah Arendt, E.L. Doctorow, Flannery OConnor, Michael Herr, and Don DeLillo. The legends and icons who figure in this account of Roths career include Dwight Eisenhower, Meyer Lansky, Ernie Pyle, Bob Dylan, Johnny Appleseed, Anne Frank, JFK, Mickey Mantle, the Marx Brothers, Thomas Paine, Sandy Koufax, and Franz Kafka.
In this energetically written text, James Bloom takes aim at Roths soldering life and hits the target on every page exposing the conflict between Roths attraction to military service and grasp of the realities of war. Revealing Roths attitude toward the military and the nature of sports wars, Newark wars and Jewish wars, Bloom traces the heroic and not so heroic actions of martial Roth and his characters. Without a doubt, Bloom hits the bullseye.
-- Ira Nadel, The University of British ColumbiaThe Great Philip Roth has passed and it is left to professional Roth scholars to make sense of the massive, complex oeuvre he left behind. Rising to the task is professor Jim Bloom in Roth's Wars, a detailed and thoughtful study which makes a very compelling case for the centrality of violence, combat, strife and military ideation to Philip Roth nearly six decades of fictional creation. In so doing, Bloom proposes an original conceptual throughline that lets us rethink the priorities and thematic obsessions of the author. The case he makes is clear, erudite and compelling.
-- Jacques Berlinerblau, Georgetown UniversityJames D. Bloom is professor of English at Muhlenberg College.