For William Deresiewicz, the Letters of Saul Bellow come as a gift from the grave: "Drollery, mordancy, tenderness, quick-draw portraiture, metaphysical vaudeville, soul talk, heart pains, the whole human mess—Saul Bellow’s letters are a Bellow novel, the author himself the protagonist." In the case of an author whose books "are letters," Deresiewicz writes, "but letters, necessarily, to the world," the collection offers insights into one of the greatest storytellers of the twentieth century.
Credit: Viking / © 2010 Janis Bellow
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