Never Say Youve Had a Lucky Life, Joseph Epstein
Never Say Youve Had a Lucky Life, Joseph Epstein
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Never Say You've Had a Lucky Life
Especially If You've Had a Lucky Life

Author: Joseph Epstein

Narrator: Fred Sanders

Unabridged: 7 hr 39 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/16/2024


Synopsis

A rich and comic portrait of the radical changes in American life and the literary world over the last eighty years.

An autobiography usually requires a justification. The great autobiographies—those by Benvenuto Cellini, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Benjamin Franklin, and Henry Brooks Adams—were justified by their authors living in interesting times, harboring radically new ideas, or participating in great events. Joseph Epstein qualifies on none of these counts. His life has been quiet, lucky in numerous ways, and far from dramatic. But it has also been emblematic of the great changes in our country since World War II.

He grew up in a petit-bourgeois, Midwestern milieu, and the city of Chicago looms large in his life. He drew a lucky ticket in the parent lottery and his was a happy boyhood spent on playgrounds and hanging around drug stores. At high school dances, he was the rhumba king and at drive-in movies he was never allowed to go as far with girls as he so ardently desired. At twenty-six, after two years in the army, he found himself married, the father or stepfather of four children, and living in New York on the meager salary of a magazine subeditor. He was ablaze with ambition and fettered by frustration. He broke out by moving to Little Rock, Arkansas, to direct the city’s anti-poverty program at the height of the Civil Rights movement. His writing career blossomed, he began teaching at Northwestern University, and, for twenty-five years, edited one of great intellectual magazines.

Never Say You’ve Had a Lucky Life is an intimate look at one life steeped in radical change: from a traditionally moral culture to a therapeutic one, from an era when the extended family was strong to its current diminished status, from print to digital life featuring the war of pixel on print, and on. But for all the seriousness of Epstein’s themes, this book is memorable for its comic point of view and the constant reminder of how unpredictable, various, and wondrously rich life can be.

About Joseph Epstein

Joseph Epstein is the author of thirty-one books, among them works on divorce, ambition, snobbery, friendship, envy, and gossip. He has published seventeen collections of essays and four books of short stories. He has been the editor of the American Scholar, the intellectual quarterly of Phi Beta Kappa, and for thirty years he taught in the English Department at Northwestern University. He has written for The New YorkerCommentary, New Criterion, Times Literary Supplement, Claremont Review of Books, The New York Review of Books, Poetry, and other magazines both in the United States and abroad. In 2003, he was awarded the National Humanities Medal.  


Reviews

Goodreads review by Stetson

Joseph Epstein has presented us with an entirely unwarranted but entirely wonderful autobiography. Taking stock of his long and full life, Epstein proceeds linearly from his childhood through his adult life and finally considers the finish line. Interesting, only a couple chapters are focused on his......more

Goodreads review by Tom

I'm inclined to write what H.L. Mencken did when he read Sinclar Lewis' Main Street, "That idiot has written a masterpiece"! Joseph Epstein is a mild-mannered essayist who led a calm, even dull life, devoted to his work, so him writing an autobiography really makes very little sense, as he himself a......more

Since 2003, Joseph Epstein’s writing has brought me great reading pleasure and delight. That year I was introduced to a collection of short stories, FABULOUS SMALL JEWS, that from its description seemed like it would be right up my alley. It was set in Chicago, where I had grown up, and focused on c......more

Goodreads review by Michael

Epstein is the greatest living American essayist. This is his autobiography. He confesses up front that, "I did little, saw nothing notably historic, and endured not much out of the ordinary of anguish or trouble or exhalation.". He was born in 1937 and grew up in Chicago. He worked in a few editing......more

Goodreads review by Jeff

I have read many of his brief opinion pieces as well as longer essays. I always come away informed. I may disagree but I am informed. Because I find his opinions and insight valuable, I have wondered about his life so I appreciated the autobiography. Epstein was 86 years old when he finished writing......more