Metacritic Books

The Disappointment Artist
by Jonathan Lethem

ISBN: 0385512171
Doubleday, 160 pages, $22.95
Nonfiction Essays, Literary Criticism
Released 03/15/2005

The novelist ventures into nonfiction territory with this collection of essays about various aspects of popular culture and his own childhood.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

75 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding New York Observer Tom Shone
This is a gem of a book. I can't think of another that captures so well the livid warmth -- later curdling into embarrassment -- that characterizes the jejune, impassioned and borderline-pretentious tastes with which we first find, and then lose, ourselves. [21 Mar 2005, p.7]
Favorable San Francisco Chronicle Adam Baer
These are the highest form of personal culture essays: They explain what the subject means to the writer and then, through the use of story, they chart how that meaning became a strand in the dirty rubber-band ball he calls his self.
Favorable The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Zsuzsi Gartner
A collection that will be more appreciated by committed Lethem fans than by the casual sidetracked reader. [9 Apr 2005, p.D14]
Favorable The Onion A.V. Club Keith Phipps
The best essays in The Disappointment Artist, however, erase boundaries separating the personal world from the world at large.
Favorable Booklist Donna Seaman
Lethem succeeds in granting readers insights not only into his passions but also into their own. [1 Feb 2005, p.930]
Favorable Kirkus Reviews
Persistent and persuasive, like listening to that friend with the smartest take on just about any subject under the sun. [15 Dec 2004, p.1185]
Favorable Publishers Weekly
Starts with an intriguing, if emotionally distant, consideration of his lifelong relationship with popular culture and develops into a moving memoir that transcends those references altogether. [13 Dec 2004, p.53]
Favorable Boston Globe Amanda Heller
With surprisingly little sentimentality or self-flattery he tells us, essentially: Here are the seeds. See how they grew.
Favorable Entertainment Weekly Gilbert Cruz
Lethem's trademark pop insight makes this slim volume a remarkable read.
Favorable Los Angeles Times Marc Weingarten
By conflating rich critical insight with moving emotional subtext, Jonathan Lethem has produced a disarming treatise on the essential connectivity between life and art. [15 Mar 2005, p.E7]
Favorable The Observer Sean O'Hagan
An odd little book.
Favorable TLS: The Times Literary Supplement Henry Hitchings
The Disappointment Artist, while an unabashedly quirky book, succeeds on several fronts. Jonathan Lethem offers a probing critique of art forms and artists that are frequently underestimated, narrates his own creative genesis, and writes poignantly about the way we engage with our idols.
Mixed The Observer Steven Poole
Some of the writing is gimmicky... But Lethem, as readers of his novels will know, certainly has style.

CLOSE THIS WINDOW

©2008 CNET Networks Inc. All rights reserved.