Reviews

The Best American Essays 2010 by Robert Atwan, Christopher Hitchens

jenmcmaynes's review

Go to review page

3.0

As with any compilation, some essays were definitely better than others. My favorites blended the personal with the public; Gyromancy by Rindo (about his own diagnosis of Meniere's disease and the possibility that Van Gogh suffered from it as well) and Speaking in Tongues by Zadie Smith (about language, being biracial, and the US President) were brilliant, five-star essays. Go read them now. A few other good, but not great ones, were The Murder of Leo Tolstoy by Batuman, The Elegant Eyeball by Gamel, and My Genome, My Self by Pinker. These succeeded, though to a lesser degree than the first two because, again, they blended the personal with the science or history and made an engaging read. The essays I really didn't care for didn't do that: How Einstein Divided America's Jews by Isaacson read like a very dry chapter from a very dry history of early 20th century Zionism; Me, Myself, and I's (Kramer) exploration of the father of the essay, Montaigne, was sadly lacking the personal, too (so ironic, I know!). And the essays on Updike, Orwell, and Buckley, though well written, are really only for already-existing fans.

So a mixed bag, but on the whole interesting. Well worth the $1 I paid for it at the used book sale. :)

msaid2's review

Go to review page

4.0

Hard (actually impossible) to give an overall ranking to a disparate set of essays but the pleasure I got from reading "The Murder of Leo Tolstoy" grants this at least 4 stars.

bumblevee's review

Go to review page

3.0

In general, the “Best American” series is more often than not, a mixed bag and gamble. I find that whether or not I find the series successful is solely dependent on the Guest Editor’s taste in reading matching up with my own. The way the series is structured, a series editor (in this case Robert Atwan) whittles down a veritable pool of submissions from various publications for the best 100 or so essays from any given year, and the guest editor picks, in his/her own personal opinion, the best 20 for the book. I read the 2005 edition of the “Best American Short Stories” and found that Michael Chabon and I have vastly differing taste in fiction, and therefore found the experience rather uninspired.

I had higher hopes this time around as I generally admire Christopher Hitchens as a writer. Overall, I was pleased, but by no means blown away. All of the pieces are well written, but Matt Labash’s “A Rake’s Progress” is the only one whose writing really left a lasting impression and reminded me very much of Gay Talese. Essays covered a wide variety of intellectual topics ranging from eyeballs to sadistic necrophiliac lions to a discourse on how Einstein divided America’s Jewish population. I’d recommend this book to anyone wanting to brush up on long-form essay writing, or looking for inspiration for creative non-fiction writing with the caveat that some of the pieces will probably be uninteresting for those with no desire to read about sometimes obscure topics such as 18th century French poets or George Orwell’s political and literary evolutions.

grahamiam's review

Go to review page

3.0

Prefer 2008.

Best -

"The Dead Book" by Jane Churchon
"Irreconcilable Dissonance" by Brian Doyle
"The Elegant Eyeball" by John Gamel

bibliokris's review

Go to review page

4.0

I buy this or receive as a gift each year; I love essays, and these are always insightful and worth reading.
More...