mcelroy
Yves Abrioux approaches Woman and Men (1987) as an extended novelistic medition on cognition and action.
On the occasion of a new novel by Joseph McElroy and the Overlook Press reissue of McElroy's earlier work, Andrew Walser initiates a revaluation.
Further on McElroy and a novel that reflects the mind's helter-skelter workings while (for the protagonist) creating many occasions for avoidance.
Joseph McElroy shares field notes and reflections from Mount St. Helens.
Excerpted from Water Writing - an essay; presented as part of the ebr Critical Ecologies thread; concurrent with a literary Festschrift in honor of Joseph McElroy's lifework.
Ian Demsky on Joseph McElroy's Ancient History and welcome interruptions.
Paul Gleason on Joseph McElroy's mid-career epic, Women and Men, as contrasted with Don DeLillo's Underworld.
On Joseph McElroy's Fiction as a lifelong, dramatic investigation of noesis - that abstract but
evocative concept rooted in Platonic idealism and redefined(through Phenomenology) as
those ineluctable acts of consciousness that constitute reality.
Joseph Milazzo writes about one of the least written about books by Joseph McElroy.
Salvatore Proietti straddles science and fiction to offer an interpretation of a McElroy Cyborg.