NONFICTION
Released: March 10, 1971
"A fair and fine tribute to a dark and aggravating presence."
Dr. Johnson was engaged, according to Dr. Fussell's entertaining monograph, in savagely honest exercises in this world's significations and the obligations attendant on the next.
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NONFICTION
Released: Aug. 28, 1975
"Still, the subject is immensely important, and Fussell—best when examining the memoirs of half-anonymous survivors—opens up challenging lines of inquiry into what he calls, in Northrop Frye's words, a piece of "our own buried life."
New inroads into an area of literary history partly probed by Bernard Bergonzi's Heroes' Twilight (1966).
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NONFICTION
Released: Sept. 1, 1980
"In this irascibly lyrical vein Fussell is as good as the people he writes about—which is very good indeed."
NONFICTION
Released: Sept. 7, 1989
"Funny, upsetting, at times brilliantly illuminating."
NONFICTION
Released: Oct. 1, 1991
"Domestic—and invaluable—Fussell."
From Fussell, a great crying out at just about everything that's awful about today's America.
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NONFICTION
Released: Sept. 1, 1994
"Despite the oddities in diction and tone, Fussell is the perfect match for his subject — witty, thoughtful, brief, and, not least of it, accurate."
Fussell (Bad, 1991, etc.) certainly has come a long way from his early work as a conventional literary scholar.
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