About

Columbia University Press Videos

Twitter

Facebook

CUP Web site

RSS Feed

New Books

Author Interviews

Author Events

Keep track of new CUP book releases:
e-newsletters

For media inquiries, please contact our
publicity department

New & Noteworthy

The Letters of Sylvia Beach
The Letters of Sylvia Beach
Edited by Keri Walsh

America's Mayor
America's Mayor: John V. Lindsay and the Reinvention of New York
Edited by Sam Roberts

Autism's False Prophets
Autism's False Prophets
Paul Offit

Donald Keene
So Lovely a Country Will Never Perish
Donald Keene

Stalking the Black Swan
Stalking the Black Swan
Kenneth Posner

Mark C. Taylor, Field Notes from Elsewhere
Field Notes from Elsewhere
Mark C. Taylor
Read an interview with Mark Taylor

CUP Authors Blogs and Sites

American Society of Magazine Editors

Benjamin Barber / "Strong Democracy"

Stephen Burt / "Accomodatingly"

Leonard Cassuto

Michel Chion

Juan Cole

Jenny Davidson / "Light Reading"

William Duggan

James Fleming / Atmosphere: Air, Weather, and Climate History Blog

Todd Gitlin

David Harvey

Paul Harvey / "Religion in American History"

Alexander Huang

Jameel Jaffer and Amrit Singh

Geoffrey Kabat / "Hyping Health Risks"

Jerelle Kraus

Michael LaSala / Gay and Lesbian Well-Being (Psychology Today

Marc Lynch / "Abu Aardvark"

S. J. Marshall

Michael Mauboussin

Noelle McAfee

The Measure of America

My Life with the Taliban

Paul Offit

Jeffrey Perry

Marian Ronan

Michael Sledge

Jacqueline Stevens / States without Nations

Ted Striphas / The Late Age of Print

Hervé This

Alan Wallace

James Igoe Walsh / Back Channels

Xiaoming Wang

Press Blogs

AAUP

Beacon Broadside

Cambridge University Press

Duke University

Fordham University Press

Harvard University

Indiana University

LSU

MIT

NYU / From the Square

Oxford University

Princeton University

Stanford University

University of Alberta

University of California

University of Chicago

University of Georgia

University of Hawaii

University of Illinois

University of Michigan

University of Nebraska

University of North Carolina

University of Pennsylvania

University of Tennessee

University of Washington

Yale University

May 12th, 2008 at 9:57 am

Cynthia Ozick on Lionel Trilling

Lionel Trilling, The Journey AbandonedThe New Republic has posted an article by Cynthia Ozick on Lionel Trilling on its Web site. In the piece, Ozick explores the impact of Trilling as a critic, his reception as a novelist, and the first-time publication of The Journey Abandoned: The Unfinished Novel.

Over the past few years there has been a resurgence of interest in Trilling. New York Review Books reissued his only published novel The Middle of the Journey and critics and scholars are once again turning back to his critical works. In assessing his prominence and achievement as a critic, Ozick writes, “No present-day magazine writer or blogger or reviewer or critic can aspire to what Trilling as essayist encompassed: his aim was nothing less than to define, and refine, civilization. He meant not only to comment or discriminate or analyze or judge, but to ’stand for something.’”

Trilling’s status as a critic did not guarantee him success as a novelist. After the publication of his first novel The Middle Journey (1947), Trilling embarked on a second novel only to give up on it. However, while conducting in the archives at Columbia University, Geraldine Murphy discovered a portion of a second novel, now published as the The Journey Abandoned. Ozick writes, “[The Journey Abandoned], was left unfinished — cast out midway, after twenty-four chapters and 150 pages. News of it erupted like a secret exploding; yet all along it was hiding in plaine in Columbia’s Trilling archive…. Columbia University Press has now brought it out … with a valuable introduction by Geraldine Murphy, the scholar who uncovered it, and who serves as its impeccable editor.”


The novel traces the fortunes of a variety of characters involved in New York City’s vibrant literary scene. The book’s central character Vincent Hammell is drawn from Trilling’s own experience yet also indebted to the nineteenth-century bildungsroman, the literary form Trilling admired as a critic and emulated as a novelist. Readers will undoubtedly try to suss out clues to Trilling’s own life and friendships in the novel. In his review of the book, Morris Dickstein, writes “A genuinely revealing text by a famous critic, a man with quite an enigmatic personality, The Journey Abandoned is of great interest. The book adds significantly to our understanding of Lionel Trilling, who remains in many ways a fascinating figure.”

Comments are closed.