3.82 AVERAGE

inspiring reflective fast-paced

I think the dust jacket does this book a disservice: it’s not so much seeking an answer to the question “can we love art by monstrous people?”—that answer emerges quickly; and I appreciate that the author didn’t do a tedious back and forth about it—but rather begins from the premise that we do love art made by bad people, and what does that mean for us, for our ideas of “genius”, “art”, “artist”, and more. Finally, a not-annoying engagement with and reading of Lolita. A great read, minus half a star because it felt at moments like the author was trying too hard to be funny/use colloquial speech when she clearly has brilliant insights that didn’t need to be tamped down by this weird casual comedian voice
informative reflective fast-paced
informative reflective slow-paced
challenging dark emotional reflective medium-paced
challenging informative reflective medium-paced
hannibanani29's profile picture

hannibanani29's review

5.0
challenging reflective medium-paced
sam_griffin's profile picture

sam_griffin's review

3.5
hopeful informative reflective sad medium-paced

Bummer to find out Bowie’s on the list. 

First half feels like a completely different book than the second half. But both have interesting points, I just wish it was cohesive and made a clearer argument. But what do I know?
challenging dark informative reflective

A brilliant collection of essays that consider the problem of art and love. 

threedgread's review

5.0
challenging informative inspiring
challenging informative medium-paced