I could only wish for the book to be several times longer.Henry Oliver, The Common Reader Substack
With their brilliant insights, Blooms letters give one the sense that it was a blessing to correspond with him. Thanks to this book, readers now have the chance to feel they have received that blessing.Shane McCrae, author of New and Collected Hell
Harold Bloom was an original-minded interpreter of an extraordinary range of authors. This fine selection of his letters also shows Bloom in a related role, as an influential confidant and commentator on the poets of his own generation. The Man Who Read Everything will be of major interest to readers of twentieth-century poetry and criticism.David Bromwich, author of Skeptical Music: Essays on Modern Poetry
This exquisitely edited collection is a powerful, humanizing addition to our understanding of a great critic. You hear so many different tonesplayful, loving, grave, self-doubting, angry, ecstatic, mocking, oracular, sympathetic, sorrowful. Throughout theres the pitch and energy of Blooms thought, his need to praise, banking on feeling above all.Kenneth Gross, University of Rochester
Here is a cornucopia guaranteed to delight anyone drawn to the infectious sensibility of the man who read everything, whose ardent love of books still inspires so many. Heather Cass Whites edition will be required reading for Bloomians of every stripe.David Mikics, author of Bellows People: How Saul Bellow Made Life into Art
Here is Harold Bloom as we knew him and as we did not: as the elevated spirit who would be a poet but could not, so instead became a poem in himself. The dazzling first and last and never-again Harold Bloom.Cynthia Ozick, author of In a Yellow Wood: Collected Stories and Essays