People who came to Perelman late commonly had difficulty understanding the zeal of earlier converts and, by chance, I could see why; I myself read his books in the wrong order and underwent the strange experience of being somewhat tired of him before I became a fan. A bit too mechanical, I thought of his later stuff.
To my mind almost all his best work is crammed into one volume—Crazy Like a Fox, first published in 1944 but spanning his oeuvre from 1931 to then. This was an awkward belief to hold during his later lifetime, because one didn't want to go about droning, "Don't read his latest." Yet it might have done his reputation a service, as it might many a slipped writer's, and it should certainly be said now….
This is a free excerpt of 130 words. There are 566 words (approx.
2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.
Read the rest of this Criticism with our Perelman, S(idney) J(oseph) 1904–1979: Critical Essay by Wilfrid Sheed Access Pass.