Reviews

Herzog by Philip Roth, Saul Bellow

cwscott27's review against another edition

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hopeful reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

abroadwell's review against another edition

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5.0

This was brilliant, through and through. I've resisted a lot of the "mid-century masters" of American literature due to my distaste for the overt sexism/homophobia of some of the prominent writers of the period (e.g. Normal Mailer, John Updike).

But my resistance melted away as I listened to the sublime prose of Saul Bellow. Moses Herzog is one of the great characters of literature -- so prolix, so brilliant, so fucked-up!

rltinha's review against another edition

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4.0

Depois de uma hiperbolizada confrontação com a singular miríade de vivências e sua memória, a verdadeira e absoluta redenção é nada ter a dizer a rigorosamente ninguém.

vicvic30's review against another edition

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5.0

This morose yet splendid novel follows Moses E. Herzog, a man at the mercy of his own uncontrollable desires. Moses is a middle-aged Jewish man in the late 1960s suffering from the betrayal of his ex-wife, who left him for his best friend. To manage his overwhelming depression, he writes letters that he never sends. He writes letters which are passionate, pedantic, and overall, vulnerable. He regresses into distraction and irreverence: sex, literature, more sex, fixing up an old house in the country, stalking his ex, etc.

Overall, I really enjoyed this novel. I listened as an audiobook and would get lost in his long rants but it was truly beautiful.

I read this on the advice of the author of my favorite novel, and it did not disappoint.

ronanmcd's review against another edition

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Takes some getting used to. The narrative is rambling and often incoherent, time and setting fluid and changes fluidly. But ultimately who cares?
When you've got the flow, it becomes a rich character study. Herzog is a proto Woody Allen falling through personal crisis, calamity and crush like an older, Jewish Holden Caulfield.
Herzog is a mess, he makes poor decisions when life doesn't make the decisions for him already, he surrounds himself with unsuitable types and kicks back by writing unsent letters, internalising his negativity and pessimism. By the end he is a brilliant creation.
Or is he? Often the voice changes, even mid paragraph from third to first. Just how much Bellow is in Herzog?

beautyistruth's review against another edition

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1.0

No, I don't like this. Horrible. Cluttered, neurotic, too Woody Allen-like. This type of style has a lot of fans though, so it's just not to my taste. I couldn't care about any of the characters and there's no nobility, beauty or depth. I hate it. It's like people are just rats scurrying about and they don't even care to take themselves out of the concern with this vile rat race, complete with Nietzsche-quoting, on occasion for deeper reflection. This may be truthful for many and it's valuable as a reflection of that, but I read literature for elevation, depth or pathos.

beltorrealba's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional funny hopeful reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

avatherose's review against another edition

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4.25

saul bellow is an incredible writer. herzog is an okay book.

sdibartola's review against another edition

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4.0

Moses Elkanah Herzog is 47 years old and the son of immigrant Jewish parents from Russia. He’s a professor and author of a modestly successful academic book, “Romanticism and Christianity.” Lately however his life is falling apart. His manipulative second wife Madeleine has taken up with his best friend Valentine Gerspach, and he’s an absentee parent to his son Marco by first wife Daisy and to his daughter June by Madeleine.

“Herzog” the novel won the National Book Award when it was published in 1964. It is written primarily in the third person, but episodically reverts to first person narration. As he tries to make sense of his life, Herzog resorts to writing letters (often unfinished and always unsent) to various people – family and friends, associates and strangers, and famous people from history. We see only Herzog’s view – his complaints about the people in his life – but we don’t see what they think of him. Author Jeffrey Eugenides calls “Herzog” a “self-reflexive epistolary novel.” Herzog is trying to regain balance, and the letter writing seems to facilitate the healing process. It’s a way to work through the problems of his life and modern society. Some have called it a “novel of redemption,” but I’m not sure that’s the case. It renders a rather harsh judgment on the contemporary world of the 1960’s. In some respects, the novel reminds me of “A Serious Man,” the 2009 film written, produced, and directed by Joel and Ethan Coen. In the movie, college professor Larry Gopnik finds his life unraveling as his wife Judith empties his bank account and seeks a divorce to move in with Sy Ableman, whose personality resembles that of Valentine Gersbach in the novel.

The women in Herzog’s life are variably portrayed. We don’t learn much at all about Daisy. Madeleine seems to be a psychopath (or at least a sociopath). The New York City shopkeeper Ramona is compassionately drawn. She’s just doing her best to make ends meet and find a meaningful relationship in middle age. Herzog doesn’t give her the consideration she seems to deserve. He’s too preoccupied with himself and his hatred of Madeleine.

In New York City, while waiting in the courthouse to meet his lawyer and discuss custody of June, Herzog stumbles upon a number of hearings that illustrate the ugliness of life. In one example, a young woman is on trial for the death of her 3-year-old son. He died from a ruptured liver after she threw him against the wall while her boyfriend watched from the bed where he was smoking a cigarette. The story makes Herzog physically sick. Referring to himself, he says: “this is the difficulty with people who spend their lives in humane studies and therefore imagine once cruelty has been described in books it is ended.” What is the emotional suffering of Herzog in comparison to this kind of horrific event? And what about global events of destruction and genocide like Hiroshima and the Holocaust? As Theodore Solotaroff says in his review “Napoleon Street and After,” “War and genocide have reduced the sacredness of the individual life.”

npryan's review against another edition

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4.25

This book started dizzily, so much so I considered it wasn't for me. But persevering by allowing the nature of the book to take its shape, I found an absolute gem of a read waiting. A phenomenal work, it makes one wonder at the sort of mind capable of putting something so insightful and intricate together.