Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Algren, Nelson - Saul Maloff (review date 1974)
Algren, Nelson - Saul Maloff (review date 1974)
Saul Maloff (review date 1974)
SOURCE: "Maverick in American Letters," in The New Republic, Vol. 170, January 19, 1974, pp. 23-4.
[In the following review of The Last Carousel, Maloff faults Algren's overblown prose, his self-indulgence, and the repetitive nature of the stories in the volume.]
No writer has been more relentlessly faithful to his scene and cast of characters than Nelson Algren. His scene is the "wild side," the "neon wilderness," the seamier sprawls of Chicago and its spiritual extensions across this broad land—America as Chicago. And his characters are the drifters and grifters, clowns and carnies, pimps and pushers, hustlers and hookers, gamblers and touts, junkies and lushes, marks and victims, conmen and shills, freaks and grotesques—the born losers who constitute a half-world, an anti-society to the society that never appears, not even as a sensed or felt presence, in Algren's work. Over the four decades of...
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Criticism
- John Woodburn (review date 1947)
- Catherine Meredith Brown (review date 1947)
- George Bluestone (essay date 1957)
- Maxwell Geismar (essay date 1958)
- Haskel Frankel (review date 1963)
- R. W. Lid (essay date 1966)
- Daniel R. Silkowski (essay date 1971)
- James R. Frakes (review date 1973)
- Saul Maloff (review date 1974)
- Commonweal (review date 1947)
- R. W. Lid (essay date 1975)
- Martha Heasley Cox and Wayne Chatterton (essay date 1975)
- Tom Carson (essay date 1986)
- Kirkus Reviews (review date 1995)
- Albert E. Wilhelm (review date 1995)
- Bettina Drew (essay date 1995)
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