We're sure you don't need us to point out James Wood's NYTBR cover review of Marilynne Robinson's Gilead, but it sure made our Sunday.
The great danger of the clergyman in fiction is that his doctrinal belief will leak into the root system of the novel and turn argument into piety, drama into sermon. This is one of the reasons that, in the English tradition, from Henry Fielding to Barbara Pym, the local vicar is usually safely contained as hypocritical, absurd or possibly a bit dimwitted. Robinson's pastor is that most difficult narrator from a novelist's point of view, a truly good and virtuous man, and occasionally you may wish he possessed a bit more malice, avarice or lust -- or just an intriguing unreliability.
Now, we're not in charge of dispensing Mr. Tanenhaus' brownies, but we would like to say that if we were, a James Wood review would get the Entenmann's trucks rolling every time.
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