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Enright, D(ennis) J(oseph) 1920–: Critical Essay by John Gross

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About 2 pages (563 words)
D. J. Enright Summary

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There is something to be said against collecting old book-reviews—but not when they are as good as D. J. Enright's. Flaubert and Heinrich Böll, 'Earthly Powers' and 'A Dictionary of Catch Phrases,' 'The Golden Lotus' and E. B. White: coming from most reviewers, the pieces assembled in 'A Mania for Sentences' would simply represent so many fares picked up at the rank. But in Enright's case they cohere, bound together by a consistent (and consistently enlivening) approach and a distinctive tone of voice, and by the mixture of subtlety tempered by common sense (or vice versa) which makes him one of the most rewarding critics currently plying his trade.

He is also a master of the witty formulation, and the book would be worth reading for the jokes alone….

This is a free excerpt of 128 words. There are 563 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Enright, D(ennis) J(oseph) 1920–: Critical Essay by John Gross from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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