Life and Art, Richard Russo
Life and Art, Richard Russo
List: $20.00 | Sale: $14.00
Club: $10.00

Life and Art
Essays

Author: Richard Russo

Narrator: Richard Russo

Unabridged: 7 hr 15 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/13/2025


Synopsis

A marvelous new essay collection from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Somebody's Fool and The Destiny Thief

Life and Art—these are the twin subjects considered in Richard Russo’s thirteen masterful new essays—how they inform each other and how the stories we tell ourselves about both shape our understanding of the world around us. In “The Lives of Others,” he reflects on the implacable fact that writers use people, insisting that what matters, in the end, is how and for what purpose. How do you bridge the gap between what you know and what you don’t (and sometimes can’t) know? Why tell a story in the first place? What we don’t understand,  Russo opines, is in fact the very thing that beckons to us. In “Stiff Neck,” he writes of the exasperating fault lines exposed within his own family as his wife’s sister and her husband—proudly unvaccinated—develop COVID. In “Triage,” he details with heartbreaking vividness the terror of seeing his seven-year-old grandson in critical condition. And in “Ghosts,” he revisits Gloversville, the town that gave rise to the now-legendary fictional town of North Bath, and confronts the specter of its richly populated past and its ghostly present.

   Life and Art comprises sharp, tender, extraordinarily intimate reflections on work, culture, love, and family from one of the great writers of our time.

About The Author

RICHARD RUSSO is the author of ten novels, most recently Somebody's Fool, Chances Are . . . , Everybody’s Fool, and That Old Cape Magic; two collections of stories; one previous essay collection; and the memoir Elsewhere. In 2002 he received the Pulitzer Prize for Empire Falls, which, like Nobody’s Fool, won multiple awards for its screen adaptation, and in 2023 his novel Straight Man was adapted into the television series Lucky Hank. In 2017 he received France’s Grand Prix de Littérature Américaine. He lives in Port­land, ME.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Dona's on May 09, 2025

Pre-Read notes A lot of nonfiction got turned away from publishers amidst and immediately following Covid. People in the US just wanted to forget it and no one wanted to read about it. But I think these stories have a lot to offer readers, so I tend to enjoy them. I haven't read from Russo before bu......more

Goodreads review by Jamie on March 03, 2025

I am a huge fan of Richard Russo, so when I saw his book on NetGalley, I immediately requested it; I didn’t even read the description. I was treated to a book of essays that were wonderful! My favorite parts were reading about his parents and the essay about his novel “Straight Man,” which is a favo......more

Goodreads review by Rachel on February 15, 2025

Richard Russo's new collection of essays touches on topics ranging from the pandemic to his childhood in upstate New York. He reflects on how his life experience shaped some of his novels and shares some insight related to film adaptations of his work, too. My favorite pieces here address his later-......more

Goodreads review by Dan on March 24, 2025

My thanks to NetGalley and Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor - Knopf for this advance copy of a collection of essays written in a time of great change for this country, trying to understand the present while looking to the past, and finding only more questions, along with an understanding why the......more

Goodreads review by Renea on March 30, 2025

While I haven’t read all of Richard Russo’s works, I’ve read quite a few of them, and although this collection of essays is worth reading, it feels like it was written only for those who have read his work already. I thought the first half of the book, with essays on “Life,” was much stronger than t......more


Quotes

"Russo scholars will devour this book. . . . Aspiring writers should appreciate the advice Russo doles out in these pages." —Associated Press

"If the essay is a dying art, Life and Art proves its enduring necessity. In an era where surface-level engagement dominates, Russo's collection insists that the essay still has the power to excavate, illuminate, and endure." The Arkansas Democrat Gazette

“Russo’s skill as a storyteller is on full display.” Publishers Weekly

“A welcome visit with a major contemporary writer.” Library Journal

“Despite their brevity and transparency, Life and Art's insightful explorations offer more grist for contemplation than many longer and superficially more complex works.” Shelf Awareness