Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Chambers, Whittaker - Sam Tanenhaus (essay date April 1990)
Chambers, Whittaker - Sam Tanenhaus (essay date April 1990)
Sam Tanenhaus (essay date April 1990)
SOURCE: Tanenhaus, Sam. “Whittaker Chambers, Man of Letters.” New Criterion 8, no. 8 (April 1990): 11-19.
[In the following essay, Tanenhaus surveys Chambers's literary and journalistic work.]
Within the space of a generation—that is, since 1964, when Cold Friday was published to tepid reviews—Whittaker Chambers has been all but forgotten as a writer. Those conversant with the Alger Hiss case know, of course, that from the 1920s through the 1950s Chambers was frequently—at times steadily—in print. But his most enduring utterance seems to be the testimony he gave before the House Committee on Un-American Activities in 1948. Scholars of the Cold War seldom look beyond it to the ample personal record he left behind in his poetry, fiction, and journalism; few bother even with Witness, Cold Friday, and Odyssey of a Friend.1 The work is there. It just...
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- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Robert Raynolds (review date autumn 1951)
- John Cogley (review date 23 May 1952)
- Irving Howe (essay date 1952)
- David Cort (review date 16 February 1970)
- John Kenneth Galbraith (review date 28 March 1970)
- Wilfred Sheed (review date March 1971)
- Gerhart Niemeyer (review date 4 August 1978)
- William McGurn (essay date spring 1984)
- Russell Nieli (essay date summer 1987)
- Philip Abbott (essay date 1987)
- Joseph Sobran (review date 2 June 1989)
- Charles Horner (review date April 1990)
- Sam Tanenhaus (essay date April 1990)
- Colm Brogan (review date 11 December 1995)
- Kirkus Reviews (review date 15 September 1997)
- William F. Buckley Jr. (review date 24 November 1997)
- Theodore Draper (essay date 4 December 1997)
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