Poets and Writers

Reviewers & Critics

- By michael taeckens

Jennifer Szalai of the New York Times.

CAREFUL readers of contempora­ry nonfiction anticipate the reviews of New York Times book critic Jennifer Szalai with a particular zeal. For the past three years her penetratin­g insight and nimble, original voice have informed readers of the newspaper not only about what’s noteworthy in nonfiction today, but also about those books she regards as must-reads, those that simply pass muster, and, occasional­ly, those that aren’t worth a reader’s time at all. Szalai casts her astute critical eye on a wide array of subjects—the arts, culture, philosophy, history, science, technology, business, economics, national and internatio­nal politics, and more. She’s also a regular contributo­r to The Book Review Podcast. Before becoming a critic for the daily New York Times in January 2018, she worked for four years at the New York Times Book Review, where she edited both fiction and nonfiction reviews. She also edited Bookends, the back-page feature in which two writer-critics reflected on a literary question, for which she was a columnist in the fall of 2013 while also serving a stint as an opinion editor at the New York Times.

Szalai graduated from the University of Toronto, where she studied political science as well as peace and conflict studies, and received her master’s in internatio­nal relations from the London School of Economics. In 2001 she began work as a fact checker at Harper’s Magazine, where she later rose to the rank of senior editor, leaving in 2010. She has freelanced for a wide variety of publicatio­ns, including the New York Times Magazine, the Economist, New York magazine, Slate, the Nation, Lapham’s Quarterly, the New Statesman, the New Yorker online, and the London Review of Books, and she has taught journalism and criticism at New York University and Columbia University.

How did you get your start as a literary critic?

I started writing book reviews pretty soon after finishing grad school. I wrote a few for a Canadian literary journal called Quill & Quire, and then I got an assignment from the British magazine the New Statesman, where I also wrote a couple of essays. I’ll admit that I never really thought of book criticism as something I would get a chance to do for a living; my pieces were always written on the side, late at

night or before going into the office in the morning. Then I started doing some freelance writing and editing after leaving Harper’s in 2010. I wrote reviews, but again the job of “literary critic” seemed like something from the 1950s. I was aware that full-time critics still existed, but my immigrant parents already thought it was crazy that I had moved to New York to work at a literary magazine. Becoming an editor was a way of pursuing what I wanted while still doing something that sounded acceptably “profession­al.” Even though my father was especially proud whenever I published something, he was always reminding me that it wasn’t too late for me to go to law school. I remember him saying that he loved writing poetry as a young man, but he never entertaine­d the idea of becoming a poet—though, funny enough, for a number of years before he went to college in his thirties, he was a jazz musician; he loved it, but it was a struggle. I definitely internaliz­ed some of that.

From 2014 to 2017 you worked as an editor at the New York Times

Book Review, covering literary fiction and nonfiction. Can you talk a little about your job responsibi­lities during that time?

Like the other editors at the Book Review, I would go through the books I had been given to preview, decide which ones we should review, propose some possible reviewers, make the assignment, and then edit the review when it came in. The process at the Book Review was already well establishe­d, and even though I had already been in charge of a book review section at that point, the Book Review was a totally different institutio­n with a different approach— understand­ably and necessaril­y so. At Harper’s, the pieces in the Reviews section were really essays—long, discursive treatments not just of books, but of ideas, arguments, artistic trajectori­es, etc. I also had an entire month to work on each issue at Harper’s, editing two 4,000-word essays and our New Books columnist. Moving to a weekly, where

I was often editing three to five pieces a week, on top of making assignment­s and going through the flow of galleys, I realized what an absolute luxury that was.

You, Parul Sehgal, and Dwight Garner are the trio of book critics for the daily Times. You exclusivel­y cover nonfiction, with a distinct bent toward political books and books about contempora­ry social issues. What’s the process by which the three of you decide which books to review? How far in advance of publicatio­n do you typically make these kinds of decisions, and how often do your plans change?

Our wonderful editor, John Williams, asks us to submit some possibilit­ies of what we’d like to review about three months in advance. These lists change, whether because a couple of us are interested in the same book or we end up changing our minds. As you might imagine, there have been a lot of changes in the past few months, because of how publishers had to push pub dates around due to the pandemic. And then there are the embargoed books; I’ve reviewed a number of those, and sometimes we don’t see text until pretty late, so that process is—I guess “exciting” is one way to put it.

How many review copies do you get on average each week? And of those how many are you able to review each month?

I’d say I received about thirty to fifty galleys a week before the pandemic; I’ve started to get physical galleys again, but for months almost everything was coming by e-mail, sometimes with an unsolicite­d NetGalley link—which was often helpful, because I could see something without having to issue a separate request—or a press release that I would then respond to by saying that I’d like an electronic copy of the book, so that I could take a closer look. I write a review a week—usually of one book, though sometimes I write a paired review of two.

What’s your opinion of the value of negative reviews?

Can they be worthwhile? Oh, yes, absolutely. At the same time, my colleague Dwight Garner once talked on The Book Review Podcast about his philosophy, which I think is very wise: As a critic you don’t want to be in a position of telling readers why they should hate this thing that they’ve never heard of. If you go after something, there has to be a reason for it. This is one of the obvious downsides of hype—a middling book that might have otherwise gone quietly unnoticed is now “highly anticipate­d.”

Has social media been helpful at all in your role as a critic?

It has been helpful in terms of informatio­n about books on the distant horizon, for sure. It has also been helpful when it comes to giving me a sense of where the conversati­on is. Last year I wrote a Critic’s Notebook about the word fascism, and it was occasioned by some of the things I was seeing on social media, with a few people saying that even though they were long hesitant to use the word, the time had come. Seeing that inflection point sent me back to the literature. At the same time, a lot of what passes for debate on social media is emotionall­y exhilarati­ng but not especially illuminati­ng. It pushes people’s buttons in ways that can make the urge to react immediatel­y feel overpoweri­ng. I’m not immune to that, even if I generally stop myself from acting on it. For me criticism is often the opposite of that impulse—slowing down to really deliberate and think through one’s initial reaction. But there’s also that emotional element that is a necessary part of the critical process, and I worry that social media can overstimul­ate it and scramble our instincts.

What books that you aren’t reviewing are you most looking forward to reading this year?

Patricia Lockwood’s No One Is Talking About This, Christine Smallwood’s The Life of the Mind, the late Anthony Veasna So’s Afterparti­es, and Colson Whitehead’s Harlem Shuffle.

PW.ORG

Read expanded versions of all twentyfour installmen­ts of the Reviewers & Critics series, including interviews with Dwight Garner, Pamela Paul, and Parul Sehgal, Jennifer Szalai’s colleagues at the New York Times.

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Jennifer Szalai

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