Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Paretsky, Sara - Guy Szuberla (essay date 1991)
Paretsky, Sara - Guy Szuberla (essay date 1991)
Guy Szuberla (essay date 1991)
SOURCE: “Paretsky, Turow, and the Importance of Symbolic Ethnicity,” in MidAmerica XVIII: The Yearbook of the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, edited by David D. Anderson, Midwestern Press, 1991, pp. 124-35.
[In the following essay, Szuberla discusses the importance of ethnic identity to the character Rusty Sabich in Scott Turow's book Presumed Innocent and to protagonist V. I. Warshawski in Sara Paretsky's detective novels.]
“I really thought I was Joe College. That's who I wanted to be, and that's who I thought I was. Really, I thought I was fucking Beaver Cleaver, or whoever the boy next door is these days. I really did.” What Rusty Sabich acknowledges in this angry confession, somewhere near the heart of Scott Turow's Presumed Innocent, is his abiding sense of his own “strangeness.” Like Sarah Paretsky's V. I. Warshawski, Sabich alternately affirms and denies his...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Jane S. Bakerman (essay date 1985)
- Richard E. Goodkin (essay date 1989)
- Sara Paretsky with Monica Hileman (interview date March 1989)
- Mary A. Lowry (review date July 1989)
- Maureen T. Reddy (essay date 1990)
- Guy Szuberla (essay date 1991)
- Alison Littler (essay date Winter 1991)
- Glenwood Irons (essay date 1992)
- Gloria A. Biamonte (essay date 1994)
- Kathleen Gregory Klein (essay date 1994)
- Christopher Lehmann-Haupt (review date 20 June 1994)
- Patricia Craig (review date 21 October 1994)
- Glenwood Irons (essay date 1995)
- Margaret Kinsman (essay date 1995)
- Rebecca A. Pope (essay date 1995)
- Ann Wilson (essay date 1995)
- Natasha Cooper (review date 20 October 1995)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
