The Paris Review

The Most Unread Book Ever Acclaimed

We’re away until January 2, but we’re reposting some of our favorite pieces from 2018. Enjoy your holiday!

Like the holy’s . They feel less like user warnings or cautionary tales than being forced to gaze upon the skeletons of those who had previously made the attempt. When it was published in 1965, the critic Peter Prescott gave up after two days, even though his editor offered him four times the normal rate (everyone else had refused). The online reader reviews I found vary between naked revulsion and sheepish endorsement. One Amazon reviewer claims he gave a copy of the twelve-hundred-page novel to each of his friends and promised that if they finished, he would pay for their children’s college education. “I’ve paid for no one’s education!” he writes. Upon Young’s death in 1995, thirty years after the novel was published, the proclaims it “one of the most widely unread books ever acclaimed.”

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