Friday, September 29, 2023

Philip Roth

 


It's probably the case at this point that I've read more novels by Philip Roth than by any other author. And having just finished The Human Stain, I was reminded why: Roth was a writer of tremendous talent -- both stylistically as well as in his ability -- his seemingly innate ability -- to develop complex, breathing, vivacious characters. The Human Stain is full of these: war veterans, drinkers, university administrators, the list goes on. This is a novel that packs a serious punch, but not only because of the interactions between its characters. There's a racial consciousness to The Human Stain and Roth goes further here, I think, to probe race relations than he does in others of his books. Coleman Silk is everything: Black, Jewish, white, intellectual; and yet, he is these things because he's made them his own; he's cast them, bent them to his will. Perhaps my favorite line from the novel is: "Every day you woke up to be what you had made yourself." Let this be a motivation, and reminder, to all of us.

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