
Patrick Madden
Author of Quotidiana
Works by Patrick Madden
Lamp Light Hollow 1 copy
Associated Works
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Volume 33 Number 2, Summer 2000 (2000) — Contributor — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Ohio University (PhD candidate|English)
Brigham Young University (MA|English|1999) - Organizations
- Brigham Young University
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints - Places of residence
- Athens, Ohio, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Ohio, USA
Members
Reviews
Disparates: Essays by Patrick Madden is a wonderful collection of essays, or maybe essayistic pieces. Form, as well as content, is both playful and played with. The book descriptions mention taking some of the seriousness out of the perception of the essay form. While true, it also illustrates that serious and playful are neither opposites nor mutually exclusive.
I think many essays, or at least what we expect from many essays, is something that is both personal and to some extent conclusive, show more even if that conclusion is that there is no definitive answer. In other words, we still think of an essay as similar to what we all wrote in school, something that ultimately argues or illustrates a point or a stand on something. What I found refreshing here was that even more than usual these essays invited, and at times insisted, that the reader walk part of the path. Maybe even beyond where Madden the essayist stopped. This is the next step beyond simply thought-provoking. This is thought generating. It seems at times he starts making a point or expressing an idea (often abstractly) only to question himself and finally to leave it to us to follow through. Don't get me wrong, I don't mean in the sense of simply deserting the reader. We still have a very good idea where he continued after the essay, but we are offered the opportunity to follow or find our own path through our own interpretations of his observations.
I realize that I probably sound confusing in the previous paragraph, or at least confused. That is not the case. I just can't really put into words what I feel these essays accomplished that is different from what many other wonderful essay collections have accomplished. So the disconnectedness is all on me, not within the book itself. Look at it this way: the book succeeded in making me think enough that even a few days after finishing the book I am still working through what I read and how I feel about it. I love books that do that. A book that stops acting on me the second I stop physically acting on the book might be enjoyable but is a temporary dalliance. This is something that is becoming a part of who I am and how I think. Maybe a small part, but at my age there is only room left for small changes.
Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. show less
I think many essays, or at least what we expect from many essays, is something that is both personal and to some extent conclusive, show more even if that conclusion is that there is no definitive answer. In other words, we still think of an essay as similar to what we all wrote in school, something that ultimately argues or illustrates a point or a stand on something. What I found refreshing here was that even more than usual these essays invited, and at times insisted, that the reader walk part of the path. Maybe even beyond where Madden the essayist stopped. This is the next step beyond simply thought-provoking. This is thought generating. It seems at times he starts making a point or expressing an idea (often abstractly) only to question himself and finally to leave it to us to follow through. Don't get me wrong, I don't mean in the sense of simply deserting the reader. We still have a very good idea where he continued after the essay, but we are offered the opportunity to follow or find our own path through our own interpretations of his observations.
I realize that I probably sound confusing in the previous paragraph, or at least confused. That is not the case. I just can't really put into words what I feel these essays accomplished that is different from what many other wonderful essay collections have accomplished. So the disconnectedness is all on me, not within the book itself. Look at it this way: the book succeeded in making me think enough that even a few days after finishing the book I am still working through what I read and how I feel about it. I love books that do that. A book that stops acting on me the second I stop physically acting on the book might be enjoyable but is a temporary dalliance. This is something that is becoming a part of who I am and how I think. Maybe a small part, but at my age there is only room left for small changes.
Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. show less
This book was my first exposure to creative nonfiction, and I fell in love with it immediately. Reading it for the second time, though, I was surprised by how rambling some of the essays are, a technique that I've grown to dislike in personal essays. And all those math equations? Yeah, don't care.
However, there is still much in Madden's writing that I hope to emulate in my own, such as his ability to make small things profound, to describe common things in interesting ways. "Gravity and show more Distance" and "Singing" are my favorite essays, along with, of course, "The Infinite Suggestiveness of Common Things." show less
However, there is still much in Madden's writing that I hope to emulate in my own, such as his ability to make small things profound, to describe common things in interesting ways. "Gravity and show more Distance" and "Singing" are my favorite essays, along with, of course, "The Infinite Suggestiveness of Common Things." show less
I always dreaded writing essays for school. It never seemed like a particularly enjoyable or effective way for me to share my ideas, and often I felt constrained by rigid structural expectations or formal writing conventions. What I loved about this collection of charming oddball essays is that it helped me see the possibilities and potential fun that can be had with the form. Why can’t an essay be in the form of an ebay ad or crossword puzzle? Why can’t you pepper in references to song show more lyrics or obscure literary quotations? Patrick Madden clearly delights in the freedom of essays and I must say that enthusiasm is infectious! I love that this collection was a laugh-out-loud entertaining experience, yet was also informative and instructive as to what essays really can be. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 40
- Popularity
- #370,099
- Rating
- 4.6
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- 3
- ISBNs
- 10
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