Claire Dederer is the author of Love and Trouble, and the New York Times bestselling memoir Poser: My Life in Twenty-Three Yoga Poses. A book critic, essayist and reporter, Dederer is a long-time contributor to The New York Times and has also written for The Atlantic, Vogue, Slate, The Nation and New York magazine. She lives near Seattle with her family.
What a treat it is: funny, lively and convivial, constantly in
argument with itself . . . Dederer's tone and willingness to be
wrong and confused, along with her seductive, intimate style, bring
the subject to new life . . . how rare and nourishing this sort of
roaming thought is and what a joy to read. How moving, too, the
underpinning adoration that allows the difficult questions to be
asked. You are left wishing Dederer would apply her generous mind
to every other niggling unfinished hang-up that haunts our
culture
*Sunday Times*
In a world that wants you to think less - that wants, in fact, to
do your thinking for you - Monsters is that rare work, beyond a
book, that reminds you of your sentience. It's wise and bold and
full of the kind of gravitas that might even rub off
*Lisa Taddeo*
Personal, open-hearted and intellectually playful
*The Times*
Witty and conversational . . . It's a book full of the nuance that
the cancel culture debate so often lacks
*The Times*
Enthralling, challenging and downright unsettling . . . smart and
provocative . . . Monsters is a vital book for our times, and it
offers so much rich food for thought
*Independent*
Thrilling
*Observer*
A properly honest and passionate book that will help set this
debate alive
*New Statesman*
An exhilarating, shape-shifting exploration of the perilous
boundaries between art and life. This timely book inhabits both the
marvellous and the monstrous with generosity and wit
*Jenny Offill*
Exhilarating
*Guardian*
Excellent . . . Frank . . . A work of deep thought and
self-scrutiny that honors the impossibility of the book's
mission
*The New Yorker*
Monsters is an incredible book, the best work of criticism I have
read in a very long time. It's thrillingly sharp, appropriately
doubtful, and more fun than you would believe, given the pressing
seriousness of the subject matter. Claire Dederer's mind is a
wonder, her erudition too; I now want her to apply them to
everything I'm interested in so I can think about them
differently
*Nick Hornby*
A hot and urgent monologue structured around a problem without a
solution . . . The conclusion to this immersive and doubtlessly
important book is both tentative and bold
*Times Literary Supplement*
Part memoir, part treatise, and all treat . . . nimble, witty . . .
her exquisitely reasoned vindication of Lolita brought tears to my
eyes . . . This is a book that looks boldly down the cliff of
roiling waters below and jumps right in, splashes around playfully,
isn't afraid to get wet. How refreshing
*New York Times*
A timely interrogation of the eternal question: can you separate
the art from the artist? It showed me my bookshelves, my record
collection, the pictures and films I love - even myself - in a new,
unflinching light. I'm pressing it into the hands of everyone I
know.
*Erin Kelly, author of The Skeleton Key*
Nuanced and exploratory . . . With verve and empathy, she asks if
we can - if we should - separate the work from the biography
*Irish Independent*
Humming with originality, clarity and humour . . . The book's
questions might be zeitgeisty, but it is far more satisfying than
the circular arguments about cancel culture that abound in Twitter
threads. It sketches a Venn diagram of creativity and depravity
before plunging into its intersection - dangerous water, but one I
emerged from reinvigorated . . .
*i News*
Dederer asks, with witty self-deprecation, how we should respond to
art from artists guilty of morally squalid deeds . . . Instead of
rushing to the barricades of ongoing culture wars, Dederer offers -
and enacts - a way of thinking that acknowledges the ever growing
diversity of intellectual and moral life
*Guardian*
Sane and nuanced - even refreshingly brave. This is no dry
compendium of intellectual arguments about artistic meaning, but
rather an emotional journey through audience experience told with
engaging chattiness from an insider's perspective
*The Times*
An incredibly nuanced and human work
*Big Issue*
In this book you may not find the answer, but you will find heaps
of wit and wisdom - on monsters, victims, hate, love, and the big
grey area in between
*Spectator*
Clever and provocative
*Daily Telegraph*
A lively, personal exploration of how one might think about the art
of those who do bad things . . . It's such a pleasure to stretch
out in a big, nuanced conversation about a topic that can be so
easily flattened into wrong and right, good and bad; it's a
pleasure to be asked to think
*Vanity Fair*
Dederer's exploration offers up no easy answers, but the journey is
never less than illuminating
*Guardian*
Monsters is a dazzling book . . . If you too love the work of
Polanski - or Picasso, Hemingway, Allen, Davis, and so on -
sticking with Dederer on her curlicued journey might be the best
gift you can give yourself. The final chapter feels its way toward
a conclusion that burns clean, though it hurts a little too
*Time*
Vital, exhilarating . . . Although Dederer has done her homework,
her style is breezy and confessional . . . Monsters leaves us with
Dederer's passionate commitment to the artists whose work most
matters to her, and a framework to address these questions about
the artists who matter most to us
*Washington Post*
An exciting read . . . I was shaken to my core
*Los Angeles Times*
Perceptive and engaging
*ArtReview*
Monsters is both a nimble exploration of fan culture and a spirited
call to action
*GQ*
A blisteringly erudite and entertaining read. Dederer holds the
moral ambiguity of her subject matter, landing her arguments with
precision and flair. It's a book that deserves to be widely read
and will provoke many conversations
*Nathan Filer*
Dederer provides a fascinating new way of looking at how the work
and lives of problematic artists are bound together. She poses so
many topical questions, plays with so many pertinent ideas, that
I'm still thinking about this book long after I finished
*Claire Fuller, author of Unsettled Ground*
Monsters is extraordinary - engaging, enraging, provocative, and
brilliant. It's like a long conversation with your smartest friend.
I am buying this book for everyone I know
*Ann Patchett, author of Tom Lake*
Conversational, clear and bold without being strident . . . Dederer
showcases her critical acumen . . . In this age of moral policing,
Ms. Dederer's instincts to approach such material with an open mind
- and heart - are laudable
*Wall Street Journal*
An invigorating, engrossing, and deeply intelligent book. By
guiding us through her critical dilemmas, Dederer performs an act
of generosity: she allows the reader the space and encouragement to
interrogate their own beliefs. Monsters made me laugh, argue, tear
up, and most importantly, think
*Julia May Jonas, author of Vladimir*
Smart and engaging, never dogmatic or pious, I loved this.
*David Nicholls*
Excellent. Erudite and unpretentious, ruthlessly honest, a
searching self portrait as well as moral inventory of good artists
doing bad things
*Stephanie Danler, author of Sweetbitter*
Thoughtful
*The Times*
Punchy and sharp . . . Exploring her own relationship to art made
by shitty men, the book moves beyond tedious cancel culture
discourse to interrogate ethics, art and fandom with nuance and
compassion
*i-D*
The book is tangled and fascinating, chasing down arguments and
questions that can't always be easily resolved. Dederer's shrewd,
vivid descriptions of movies and books suggest just how much they
mean to her and how deeply any sacrifices on the altar of
contemporary sexual ethics might cut
*Slate*
[Dederer] just keeps getting better and smarter . . . it's
absolutely exhilarating to read the work of someone so willing to
crumple up her own argument like a piece of paper, throw it away
and start anew. She's constantly challenging her own assumptions,
more than willing to find flaws in her own thinking
*San Francisco Chronicle*
I flat-out admire her book and want to share it with my students.
As a thinker, Dederer is smart, informed, nuanced and very
funny
*Maureen Corrigan, NPR Fresh Air*
The rare polemic that's full of greedy love for the good stuff in
this world, Monsters is an expansion of Dederer's instant classic
Paris Review essay from 2017, 'What Do We Do with the Art of
Monstrous Men.' With a larger canvas, she lets both her cast of
monsters and our culpability grow, and manages to one-up herself
over and over again. Cooly pensive on an overheated subject,
Dederer writes powerfully about art's ability to move us, teach us,
and entrap us
*Bustle*
Monsters is like having the best version of the "good art by bad
people" conversation. Dederer writes like your wisest, most
compassionate friend, helping to guide you to your own thoughts and
generously offering her own. I loved it
*Lizzy Stewart, author of Alison*
Slyly funny, emotionally honest, and full of raw passion, Claire
Dederer's important book about what to do when artists you love do
things you hate breaks new ground, making a complex cultural
conversation feel brand new. Monsters elegantly takes on far more
than 'cancel culture' - it offers new insights into love, ambition,
and what it means to be an artist, a citizen, and a human being
*Ada Calhoun, author of Also a Poet*
She asks important questions . . . Subtle and adroit
*The Atlantic*
Dauntless, cannily reasoned and barn-burning . . . Monsters isn't
just the book that art-loving feminists have been waiting for; it's
the book that anyone determined to live an intentional life owes it
to themselves to read
*Shelf-Awareness*
Nuanced and incisive . . . Dederer's candid appraisal of her own
relationship with troubling artists and the lucidity with which she
explores what it means to love their work open fresh ways of
thinking about problematic artists. Contemplative and willing to
tackle the hard questions head on, this pulls no punches
*Publishers Weekly*
Sharp and unflinching . . . In Monsters, Dederer produces an
entirely original and self-aware contemplation on the psychological
reverberations of living in a biographical age
*AnOther*
Bringing erudition, emotion, and a down-to-earth style to this
pressing problem, Dederer presents her finest work to date
*Kirkus Reviews*
While Dederer sets out to write about the art of monsters, she
ended up writing about what it means to be human
*Document Journal*
Monsters has crystalline intellectual force . . . Dederer has
fashioned a book of depth and candor about what it is to be
heartbroken by an artist whose work we also happen to love . . . So
on point is Monsters: A Fan's Dilemma about the historical moment
in which we currently find ourselves, you want to carry it around
with you and whip it out at every bar or dinner party
*Avenue Magazine*
Smart
*People*
Spectacular . . . A work of pop-culture criticism that's fun to
read, Monsters will for sure help us have deeper conversations
around the perennial question of whether it's possible and OK to
separate the work from the art and what it really means to be a
fan. This is a book we plan to return to again and again - and to
press on all our friends
*Apple.com*
Monsters is a good companion, working away at the problem from
various perspectives, always explaining patiently what it is trying
to do and keeping it interesting by participating more
energetically than just steepling the fingers
*Strong Words*
Despite the heavy subject matter, Monsters is neither rant nor
sermon. Dederer is not only an incisive researcher and writer,
she's also conversational, approachable and funny . . . Monsters is
a worthy addition to contemporary literary criticism, but more than
that, it's a very enjoyable book about a thorny, elusive
subject
*BookPage*
Profoundly cathartic. The book feels simultaneously like having the
deepest, artiest conversation with the smartest people you know and
like having an intense shit-talking session with your closest
friends
*Alta*
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