Synopses & Reviews
Leading literary critic John Leonard is a master at decoding the fears and longings that animate our popular culture. When the Kissing Had to Stop is Leonard at his best, with his reflections on the best new literature of today and what it can tell us about America now.
The conspiracies and fears fostered by the Cold War continue to poison our national psyche. New enemies, real or imagined, have fostered subcultures of fantasy and paranoia, and vertiginous proclamations of doom and transformation. Leonard shows how our great novelists and essayists can help us to find some sense and sanity amid the dull roar of tabloids, talk shows, and the Disneyfication of everything.
Review
"When I start to read John Leonard, it is as though I, while simply looking for the men's room, blundered into a lecture by the smartest man who ever lived." —Kurt Vonnegut
"Leonard brings together the arcane and the everyday to achieve a clarity that is dazzling. I was knocked out by his insights." —Studs Terkel
About the Author
John Leonard (1939–2008) is the author of
The Last Innocent White Man in America and
Smoke and Mirrors (both published by The New Press). He was editor of the
New York Times Book Review, literary co-editor of
The Nation, and now appeared weekly on
CBS Sunday Morning and in
New York.