Caravaggio (1571-1610)

  First thanks Verso Books—and Colin Beckett in particular—for enabling us to reprint this piece from the forthcoming volume, edited by Tom Overton: Portraits, John Berger on Artists. Each is going to his own rest. But they are all returning to the world, and its first gift is its space; later, its second gift will … Read more

Part Three

This installment of Hornick’s ongoing essay (see Part Two here) considers how serializing generates powerful effects in the Italian writer Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Novels, the fourth and final of which will be published in English in September of this year. Taken collectively, the Neapolitan Novels of Elena Ferrante comprise a single story about the relationship … Read more

Part Two

What follows is the second installment in an ongoing serialized essay about two overlapping developments within modern American culture: the questionable popular demand that political leaders come “with a narrative” and, on the literary front, a general revival of approval for long serial narratives. “[B]y nightfall all the ladies are like soft teacakes with frostings … Read more

Greider and Goodwyn

William Greider published a piece last week criticizing a New Yorker “Talk of the Town” take on Trump (and Bernie Sanders) that conflated their political theater with American populism. Greider emailed a link to his Nation piece, which he self-deprecatingly described as a “rant,” to me (and others). I responded as follows… Dear Bill, I … Read more