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The Deadline: Essays
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The Deadline: Essays
Current price: $32.00
Barnes and Noble
The Deadline: Essays
Current price: $32.00
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Size: Audiobook
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"Jill Lepore is unquestionably one of America’s best historians; it’s fair to say she’s one of its best writers too." —Jonathan Russell Clark,
Los Angeles Times
Best Books of 2023:
New Yorker, TIME
A book to be read and kept for posterity,
The Deadline
is the art of the essay at its best.
Few, if any, historians have brought such insight, wisdom, and empathy to public discourse as Jill Lepore. Arriving at
The New Yorker
in 2005, Lepore, with her panoptical range and razor-sharp style, brought a transporting freshness and a literary vivacity to everything from profiles of long-dead writers to urgent constitutional analysis to an unsparing scrutiny of the woeful affairs of the nation itself. The astonishing essays collected in
offer a prismatic portrait of Americans’ techno-utopianism, frantic fractiousness, and unprecedented—but armed—aimlessness. From lockdowns and race commissions to Bratz dolls and bicycles, to the losses that haunt Lepore’s life, these essays again and again cross what she calls the
deadline
, the “river of time that divides the quick from the dead.” Echoing Gore Vidal’s
United States
in its massive intellectual erudition,
, with its remarkable juxtaposition of the political and the personal, challenges the very nature of the essay—and of history—itself.
Los Angeles Times
Best Books of 2023:
New Yorker, TIME
A book to be read and kept for posterity,
The Deadline
is the art of the essay at its best.
Few, if any, historians have brought such insight, wisdom, and empathy to public discourse as Jill Lepore. Arriving at
The New Yorker
in 2005, Lepore, with her panoptical range and razor-sharp style, brought a transporting freshness and a literary vivacity to everything from profiles of long-dead writers to urgent constitutional analysis to an unsparing scrutiny of the woeful affairs of the nation itself. The astonishing essays collected in
offer a prismatic portrait of Americans’ techno-utopianism, frantic fractiousness, and unprecedented—but armed—aimlessness. From lockdowns and race commissions to Bratz dolls and bicycles, to the losses that haunt Lepore’s life, these essays again and again cross what she calls the
deadline
, the “river of time that divides the quick from the dead.” Echoing Gore Vidal’s
United States
in its massive intellectual erudition,
, with its remarkable juxtaposition of the political and the personal, challenges the very nature of the essay—and of history—itself.