Ilan Stavans has been described by the Washington Post as "Latin America's liveliest and boldest critic and most innovative cultural enthusiast." The New York Times has called him "one of the most influential figures in Latino literature in the United States." This collection of essays, part of the University of Michigan Press's acclaimed Writers on Writing series, helps to explain why.
Here Stavans focuses on his Jewish heritage and Hispanic upbringing and the relationship between the two cultures from both his own personal experience and that of others. Despite being hailed as a voice for Latino culture, he has also been criticized for writing about that culture while being Jewish and Caucasian, with the result that he is both an insider and an outsider, an observer and a participant, providing a unique point of view.
A Critic's Journey includes a lecture on the much-discussed topic of "Who Owns the English Language?" as well as essays on everything from the translation of Don Quixote to the durability of One Hundred Years of Solitude. He reflects on Hispanic anti-Semitism and the Holocaust in Latin America, his own experiences writing the memoir On Borrowed Words and the screen adaptation of the novella My Mexican Shiva, and writers ranging from Roberto Bolaño to W. G. Sebald.
Truly, as the Philadelphia Inquirer has said, Stavans is "an intellectual force to reckon with."