Recent Posts

New review of Seymour Krim book praises his Harlem pieces

It’s been interesting to see that Seymour Krim’s entertaining, honest, and outrageous articles on Harlem and New York black life have been embraced by reviewers who disagree otherwise. There’s something there that can’t be denied.
From NewWorld Review,
“If Krim does occasionally lapse into self-indulgence, he also exhibits one of the most acute and, ironically, objective social [...]

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Yes, the blacks and the Jews, but cool this time

Head Butler is a great source for learning about great stuff and when I checked it today these lines about blues musician Junior Wells and his record, Hoodoo Man Blues, jumped off the screen and into my brain’s Seymour Krim arena,
If they sound as if they’re in a club, that’s deliberate; this is pure Chicago [...]

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Review of American Radical, documentary about Norman Finkelstein

I reviewed American Radical for the Forward here .
He’s a figure that gets people heated, and for good reason.

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Deli news and a Seymour Krim hangout

The Times today covered the changing territory of the Jewish deli, which in too many cases has devolved into joints where tourists marvel at ridiculously large sandwiches that discourage actual eating (for shame, Carnegie Deli, for shame).
I’m all for the innovations and can tell you that the house-made sodas at Saul’s in Berkeley are terrific.
But [...]

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Ellison’s Invisible Man and my kind of politics

Just finished reading Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, and it ends with one of those great affirmations that has always been my kind of politics. It’s the politics of ecstasy, I guess.
Very near the end of the novel the Invisible Man says,
“Until some gang succeeds in putting the world in a strait jacket, its definition is [...]

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Bookforum review again

Didn’t notice before that Missing a Beat is the featured Daily Review at Bookforum today.

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Vivian Gornick reviews Missing a Beat for Bookforum

Heavyweight critic and great essayist Vivian Gornick reviews Missing a Beat in the April/May issue of Bookforum, and her hardheaded take on Seymour Krim includes this assessment,
Krim developed an essay-writing persona—neurotic, ambitious, angry, and self-mocking—through which he made an identity out of his breakdowns, his hungers, his envy of those who had achieved worldly success: [...]

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Great high school newspapers

Big web guy and mensch Dave Winer wins my heart by being a Queens kid who never let his love for New York die, despite decades in the Bay Area (the un-New York).
A few days ago he posted about his high school newspaper, Bronx Science’s Daily Planet, and the photo (left) on the cover set [...]

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Late thoughts on Greenberg and Jews (plus Bellow, Krim)

Maybe I wasn’t being fair to the movie when I finally saw it yesterday. I didn’t want to see it, was almost afraid of seeing it. And I hated it.
I’ve put in a lot of time thinking about Greenberg-type characters — from Bellow’s Tommy Wilhelm in Seize the Day to self-declared failure Nicolas Slonimsky to [...]

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David Brooks adds a page to Jewish literature of patriotism

David Brooks yesterday found a way to proclaim his love for America that in its heartbreak and longing adds a page to an American Jewish literature of patriotism.
The news hook for his New York Times op-ed column was the healthcare reform bill and the Democrats. But he soon got emotional, and it wasn’t the bill’s [...]

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