Love and Friendship

Posted on 25 September 2010 by Admin

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Love and Friendship

  • Love and Friendship

The author of The Closing of the American Mind argues that basic human connections–love and friendship–are withering away, asserting that humans’ impoverished feelings are rooted in an impoverished language of love. 200,000 first printing.

Rating: (out of 8 reviews)

List Price: $ 15.00

Price: $ 30.00

Comments (5)

  1. Anonymous says:

    Review by for Love and Friendship
    Rating:
    Are the folks at Kirkus really suggesting that good things necessarily last forever? Are the poor stewardship of following generations and the sad inevitable decay of all things, good and bad, entirely unimportant? In the same way that a dish of my favorite ice cream will surely melt, so will Rome fall eventually. But what does that have to do with anything? As Whit Stillman has indicated in “Metropolitan”, ceasing to exist is not evidence of failure – we all cease to exist, but we are not all failures. Bloom’s books (and the books of his fellow “Straussians”) are, in this reader’s opinion, the closest thing to clarity we have in books these days. Intelligent, elegant, romantic, penetrating. If Kirkus has a better suggestion for remedying the “contractual” nature of relationships (which IS out there – take a sympathetic look), I await it with anticipation. Bloom’s commentaries on Tolstoy, Shakespeare et al are clear and free of abstraction – the antidote to the glut of theoretical (read: unerotic) drudgery that exists out there on the subject of love. Perhaps Bloom doesn’t say it all, but he shows a filial loyalty to those who have come close, which is surely more than we expect nowadays.

  2. Richard Crowder says:

    Review by Richard Crowder for Love and Friendship
    Rating:
    Bloom uses the term eros broadly, to cover all forms of the longing for completion–from the love of a beautiful beloved to the love of wisdom. Ranging broadly over the history of Western literature and philosophy, he also goes deep. For each book he covers, he provides a detailed summary that effectively introduces the book to the new reader, along with commentary that illuminates the book’s contribution to our ideas of love, friendship, and what they and we can be at our best. I have reservations about Bloom’s treatment of Nietzsche, whom he discusses briefly here and there. But having read almost all of the books he covers in full-length chapters, I find those chapters faithful to their spirit. The section on Shakespeare has been published separately, but the others are equally good. The concluding chapters on Montaigne and Plato are especially striking in the clarity and force with which they present these authors’ challenge to conventional notions about living well.

  3. Daniel Myers says:

    Review by Daniel Myers for Love and Friendship
    Rating:
    This book is not objective. Bloom has an axe to grind. Not that there is intrinsically wrong in this, but….Caveat Lector. Just why Bloom developed such a deeply engrained animus to the modern age is impossible to tell and the biographies that are sure to come out in the near future (I don’t consider Ravelstein a biography in any sense of the word. Saul Bellow has axes to grind too.) will be interesting reads.-The basic problem I have with the book is this: The type of deep spiritual (Romantic, with a capital R) love that Bloom regards as lost in our society has always been rare. It has been confined to those who have had a cultured upbringing combined with an inborn sensitivity and spirituality. What has happened in our demotic age is that, as Bloom perfectly puts it, “Sure, you can be a romantic today if you so choose, but it is a little like being a virgin in a whorehouse. It just doesn’t fit with the temper of the times and gets no support in the current atmosphere.” So what? It’s still Romantic love. And our age is not alone in this temper. In more or less all ages, the vast majority of the people have regarded this type of love as, well, “silly and immature.” Bloom himself admits this in the chapter on Stendhal where he states, “Stendhal appears unable to depict a fully ripe man. Successful maturity is doubtful for him, and he may in this reflect a problem with the Romantic mood altogether.” The most clear passage in the book, the one that comes closest to hitting at what Bloom’s all about here comes in the chapter on Anna Karenina where Bloom says,”…there is an alien impression…of a gracious, semi-aristocratic civility that is now so far away from anything we can experience or hope to experience in our daily lives. The relationships of love and friendship have a delicacy and involvement with higher concerns that almost seem inauthentic. Rather than a model for our own lives, the social scene seems to be reminiscent of a lost world where people had the leisure to attempt to make works of art of their lives.” It is this “lost world” that Bloom hungers for. In other words, Bloom wants us to go back to Queen Victoria and the following Belle Epoque, when the focus of society’s lens was on these priveleged few. It is curious that Bloom chooses this attack on the modern world from a book in which the heroine commits suicide by laying herself in the path of an oncoming train bacause of that society’s narrow conventions.-But, please don’t get me wrong. I actually LIKE this book because it focuses on the most important things in life: spiritual love and friendship. It’s just that Bloom expects too much and has somehow deluded himself into thinking that there was a Golden Age when it was the norm. It has always ben rare, and I don’t see why Bloom is such a sourpuss about it. One gets the feeling that some deep hurt has been done to him, and now is the time for vindication. For some reason, Bloom wants us to believe that spiritual love is extinct when it is merely out of the limelight, where it is actually more authentic. After all, the most common adjective associated with the Victorian age is “hypocritical.” -But the book is interesting, erudite and worth the read. Just don’t get the idea that all is lost.-That part is just Bloomean bosh.

  4. Keith says:

    Review by Keith for Love and Friendship
    Rating:
    This is essentially a self-help book but Bloom tries to get us to look to the philosophers and poets, who have thought seriously about romantic love and friendship, for guidance rather than a psychology professor.

    The Kirkus review is pretty far off the mark– I dont think reviewer read more than 50 pages of the book.

    While it is true that Bloom rails against our modern culture of “hook-ups” and one night stands (his main complaint is that sex without love and passion is kind of boring and not really worthy of human capacity)– he only spends thirty pages on the subject. But the heart of the book are chapters on Rousseau and Romanticism (Stendhal, Jane Austen, Flaubert, Tolstoy); Shakespeare (Romeo and Juliet, Anthony Cleopatra, Measure for Measure, The Winter’s Tale); and a chapter called “The Ladder of Love” that focuses on Plato’s “Symposium.”

    The thesis of the book is pretty clear (despite what the Kirkus reviewer thinks): erotic love and friendship are two human endeavors that are among our most important undertakings. And their importance compels us to spend some time thinking about them with the some of humanities great thinkers.

  5. E3 says:

    Review by E3 for Love and Friendship
    Rating:
    One would need to go back to this book aqain and again, in order to fully appreciate its depth and thoughfulness. Ideally, one would have read all the books Bloom refers to, in order to have a real grasp of what he is saying, but it is not essential. Bloom stays close to the various author’s intent, in describing their thoughts, and so reading this book is not only an inspiriation, it is an education in itself. I cannot recommend it highly enough!!!

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