Review by New York Times Review
ALMOST AT THE END of "Other People," David Shields's 369-page, 73-chapter collection of - what? Short essays? Aphorisms? Letters? Long emails to us? Fragments after the German Romantic style? - he remarks, in response to an early critic of his work: "Doesn't everybody have a pitiable heart? Aren't we all Bozos on this bus?" This plaintive, heartfelt, deeply endearing observation appears in "All Our Secrets Are the Same," a three-page essay about rereading hostile reviews of his first five books (he's got 20 to his name), which is really about the nature of "confessional" writing and, by way of Robert Dana, the poetry of Keats. An author can do nothing more embarrassing than admit he reads his own reviews, with the possible exception of defending himself against them, so, naturally, at the end of "Other People," Shields does both. He is fearless about making himself vulnerable to the reader; so fearless he is willing to say, over and over in this triumphantly humane book, that he is a coward. But at the same time - and this is the David Shields we've come to love and doubt - we never know when he is making it all up, when he's just pretending, when he's pulling our leg. He's our elusive, humorous ironist, something like a 21st-century Socrates, who happens to be particularly interested in sex, sports, selfhood, actors and fiction (all of which Plato's character Socrates also discusses, for that matter). Whether you love this book or find it incredibly annoying might depend on how you feel about irony. Many of the pieces in this collection seem unashamedly all about David Shields. An authentic-sounding letter to his father apologizes for a character who resembles him in the novel "Dead Languages." The hilarious one-page "Love Is Illusion" details the clichéd but unforgettable techniques of Shields's most memorable sexual partner, from a yearlong affair three decades ago. Even in "Blindness," his essay about Tiger Woods (the dozen essays about athletes could have been published as a classic sports book on their own), Shields manages to strike a dangerously confessional tone : "My initial reaction when I saw on the web the report that Tiger Woods was seriously injured was What's the matter with me that I hope he's been paralyzed or killed? Jealousy. The much vaunted Schadenfreude. The green-eyed fairway. Tiger is extremely rich, famous (now infamous), semi-handsome (losing his hair), semi-black, the best golfer ever (was going to be), married to a supermodel (no longer, of course). I wanted him to taste life's darkness.... I was disappointed that Tiger was O.K. (for the nonce). But, really, I think we all were." Shields goes on to develop a familiar thesis about human nature: that we are divided, vertiginous, self-deceiving beings who somehow, like good old Oedipus, can't help using our strengths to destroy ourselves. In about three pages the essay discusses Freud, Milan Kundera, Bill Clinton, the British television series "Cracker," Picasso, Renata Adler's books "Speedboat" and "Gone," and Shields's own evolving views of Greek tragedy. You worry that he is merely name-dropping, being hasty or superficial, but he's not. It's pithy, and it works. The shortest essays here tend to be the best, reminiscent of Roland Barthes's "Mythologies" and also the reviews and shorter essays of Jean-Paul Sartre. This is a very French book, really, and relies on the old-fashioned idea of an essay as an attempt. But there are fragments of interviews, too, and mysterious pieces of what seems to be fiction à la Diane Williams or Lydia Davis, and a long, bad poem by one Thomas Emmet Moore, which was saved, Shields suggests, by his father among copies of his mother's obituary (an obituary she wrote herself). For whatever reason, Shields seems particularly good at about three pages. In one essay at that length, "Surviving With Wolves," he mounts a passionate defense of the memoirist James Frey, who was (he says) "crucified for a handful of inaccuracies in no way essential to the character and spirit of the book." Shields doesn't like Frey's writing: His point is the narcissism and hypocrisy of our harsh response to the fictionalizing. "Our hatred of Frey," he writes, "was due to the fact that he didn't hurt himself badly or violently enough to justify himself as self-perpetrator." Shields is a master stylist - and has been for a long time, on the evidence of these pieces from throughout his career. You have to really search for a single offnote. The collection can stand as a textbook for contemporary creative nonfiction: erudite, soulful and self-deprecating like John Jeremiah Sullivan; freewheeling and insatiably curious like Geoff Dyer; hilarious and precise like Elif Batuman; and always fresh, clean, vigorous and clear. Even the pieces that fail - a "Fife Story" told entirely through clichés and bumper sticker slogans is about as much fun as it sounds - are at least charming. I wasn't a fan of Shields's celebrated manifesto "Reality Hunger," which argued for looser boundaries among genres and greater collaboration among artists. So I was pleasantly surprised by this book's collective tone, which is strikingly gentle, amiable and above all unpretentious. It almost always reads like a conversation with a highly intelligent friend who, after two beers but before three, decides to chat away about genuinely interesting subjects he's really thought about. If you want to fight your way through an essay to understand what the author is saying, David Shields is not for you; he has more in common with Ira Glass than Robert Coover or Stanley Fish (though in an essay on "the Brown literary aesthetic," he quotes all three). I began by suggesting that Shields is an ironist or a humorist or both, but there's something more going on here. When Shields writes about Bill Murray, in one of my favorite essays in the collection, he notes that Murray "offers ways out, solutions of sorts, all of which amount to a delicate embrace of the real, a fragile lyricism of the unfolding moment. He thus flatters me that under all my protective layers of irony I, too, might have depth of feeling as well." In Mahayana Buddhism there is a practice called tonglen, in which the meditator breathes in the pain, suffering and misery of others, and breathes out all of his own goodness, positivity and accomplishment to give it away. "In the practice of exchange, you take on the pain and misery of others, and you give away your own pleasure and luxury," the great Tibetan Buddhist Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche writes, describing this technique. "Exchanging oneself for others means that you become the other and the other becomes you." This, I think, is what Shields achieves at his best. All good writers make us feel less alone. But Shields also makes us feel better. He takes in some of the bad of everyday life and our culture and the whole inescapable mess of being human and sends it back to us as good. And all the while he insists that he's doing so not as a favor to us but just because he's the kind of guy who likes to talk about himself. Because the point, as Rimbaud reminds us in a quote that Shields closes with, is that "I is another." CLANCY MARTIN is the author, most recently, of the novel "Bad Sex" and the nonfiction book "Love and Lies."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [January 1, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* I'm not interested in myself per se, Shields wrote in his provocative work, Reality Hunger: A Manifesto (2010). I'm interested in myself as theme carrier, as host. This approach has never been more evident than in his latest book. In dozens of brief essays, most lifted from his previously published books, Shields recasts his work into a hybrid narrative that is at once an essay collection, a memoir, and a critical dissection of pop culture and human relationships. As the title suggests, Shields examines others, namely friends and family and writers, athletes, and celebrities he admires. He portrays his father stalking an actor named Rudolph Schildkraut, convinced they are related. During a sleepover, teenage Shields lies to his know-it-all friend so he'll stop trying to catch his parents having sex. He dissects his love of sports movies and recalls run-ins with O. J. Simpson and Kurt Cobain. But in true Shieldsian form, his musings and observations ultimately bring him back to the subject he knows best himself, confessing behavioral similarities he shares with George W. Bush and evaluating his literary obsessions through the words of his harshest critics. Wise, surprising, and relentless, Shields demonstrates that life can be art, and so can repurposed ideas.--Fullmer, Jonathan Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
This kitchen-sink compendium of Shield's work runs the gamut of subject matter and quality. The high points include sharply observed pieces that aren't quite conventional profiles, such as an appreciation of the actor Bill Murray and a portrait of the University of Washington women's basketball teammates who revived a star player after she went into cardiac arrest. There are plenty of low points, too, including short pieces of sexual memoir and musings on desire that read as solipsistic. His portrait of radio personality Delilah and her predominantly female audience is economical, evocative, and revealing. In this selection, Shields deftly shows rather than tells, forging a sense of connection to his subject. Many of the best pieces are about sports, including a meditation on Shields's love for sports movies and an exploration of baseball players whose patterns of thinking impaired their game. Failure typically plays a role in the best pieces, sometimes ruining personal interactions, sometimes inhibiting performance. Though there is a bit too much self-exploration, the persistent bite-size introspections help the reader better appreciate how well Shields can look at others. Agent: P.J. Mark, Janklow & Nesbit. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
In his most recent nonfiction work, Shields (The Thing About Life Is That One Day You'll Be Dead) offers portraits of "other people," including family members, lovers, athletes, and celebrities. However, in these essays, Shields also frequently interrogates his notion of self, focusing a lens on his identity in relation to others. The author recognizes this inward gaze and feels the anxiety and ironic distance separating him from his subjects. This may be why he is at his best when he creates more fully realized portraits, such as those of television writer David Milch, basketball player Charles Barkley, and journalist Howard Cosell. This writerly tension, between being enmeshed in the world and at a critical remove from it, persists throughout, articulated most clearly when writing about Bill Murray: "are these just parts of myself in eternal debate, or am I really this anemic? Murray, for all his anomie, likes being in the world. Bully for him. I love standing in shadow, gazing intently at ethereal glare." VERDICT Readers fascinated by "a life limited but also defined by language" will enjoy this work by an established figure in the field.-Doug Diesenhaus, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
An assortment of musings, cultural critiques, and memoir.In this zesty collection of 74 piecessome merely paragraphsrevised from work of the last 35 years, essayist, fiction writer, and biographer (of J.D. Salinger) Shields (Writer-in-Residence/Univ. of Washington; How Literature Saved My Life, 2013, etc.) reflects on family, love, contemporary culture, and his sometimes-problematic connection to other people. "I'm drawn to affectless people whose emptiness is a frozen pond on which I excitedly skate," he admits. And: "I have trouble reading books by people whose sensibility is wildly divergent from my own." In five sections, Shields considers Men (mostly his father); Women (many about a college sweetheart); Athletes; Performers (Oprah, Adam Sandler, Bill Murray); and Alter Egos, a motley category that contains essays on Brown, which he attended in the 1970s; infamous memoirist James Frey; and Shields' career as a school-age athlete. "From kindergarten to tenth grade all I really did was play sports, think about sports, dream about sports," he writes. "The body in motion is, for me, the site of the most meaning." Beset with a severe stutter, he hoped that excelling as an athlete would make others forgive him for his "disfluency." He shared a love of sports with his father, who suffered fom bipolar disorder and occasionally disappeared from the family for treatment. In several essays, Shields examines his Jewishness: "self-consciousness, cleverness, involution, ambivalence, pride, shame." And he shows a particular sense of humor: he quotes comedian Milton Berle "turning down a second drink at a Catholic charity event: Jews don't drink; it interferes with our suffering.' " Shields credits lifelong back pain with giving him "an invaluable education in the physical, the mortal, the ineradicable wound." He sums up what he learned: "Pain is inevitable," one doctor told him. "Suffering is optional." Many essays end in such aphorisms, and "Life Story" consists entirely of declarations that read like bumper stickers. Uneven but mostly sharp and appealing. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.