Member Reviews

*Is There God after Prince? Dispatches from an Age of Last Things* by Peter Coviello is a heartfelt exploration of the power of art, culture, and connection in times of uncertainty and looming disaster. Through a series of essays, Coviello reflects on how the things we love—songs, books, movies, and people—become anchors in a world that feels increasingly fragile.

Coviello's essays are a blend of humor, sorrow, and deep critical engagement, as he navigates through a wide range of cultural touchstones, from Prince to Joni Mitchell, *The Sopranos* to *The Shining*. These essays are not just about the works themselves, but about how they intersect with the most intimate moments of life—friendship, love, loss, and the ever-present sense of "endstrickenness" that pervades our current age.

Thank you to the publishers and NetGalley for the opportunity to review a temporary digital ARC in exchange for an unbiased review.

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I liked these essays but also felt really removed from the author and his cultural references. I couldn't really get into the book, though the writing was good. I DNF'd.

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There's a lot of food for thought in this collection of essays. There's a look at culture and the world around us..
The style of writing is academic but easy to follow
Very interesting, recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher for this ARC, all opinions are mine

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My thanks to both NetGalley and the publisher University of Chicago Press for an advanced copy of this collection which looks at the importance of art, well to quote Gordon Sumner, 'When the world is running down you make the best of what's still around'.

I remember a few weeks after 9/11 Entertainment Weekly had a cover asking in big bold letters, did comedy still matter. At the time I thought that was one of the stupidest things I had ever read, and I was an Entertainment Weekly subscriber at the time. I thought back to almost a year earlier when my father had passed away. I was wrecked, lost, confused and out of it. But a few days after the funeral my Mom made a joke about him, and I laughed. Which my Dad loved to do. Which has given George Carlin, the movie Airplane! and even the music of Tina Turner places in my life, my Dad liked them, I hear it think of him, and enjoy them in different ways than I had before. Art has that power, to allow a person to feel emotions, even if the art wasn't created the way you feel them. Peter Coviello, essayist, writer and Professor at the University of Illinois Chicago discusses these feeling and more in his collection Is There God after Prince?: Dispatches from an Age of Last Things, about enjoying the things that make us feel, even as the world gets uglier and one day closer to ending.

The book begins with a celebration of music, discussing a band that I was unfamiliar with, the band Wussy, performing a song entitled 'Teenage Wasteland'. Coviello writes about the lead singer's ability to entrance, to lock the listener in to the lyrics and feel emotions and freedoms that are hard to describe. The power of art is here, and Coviello lists other bands, songs, movies and books that give that same feeling, feelings that might only be true for him, but strong feelings nonetheless. The first essay is a look at the artist Prince, how at one of the lowest points in Coviello's life, Prince brought him not only a killer party, but a love and a family. Coviello discusses how he found out Prince died, the feelings that he and others had, and also how these feelings can still help a person get through. And why art is important, even as things don't go the way anyone seems to want them.

The book is a collection of previously published essays so some ideas might be repeated. However Coviello is a very good writer, with a lot to say , with a lot of examples, examples that will open people up to some interesting music, books, and other works. Coviello has similar tastes to me, so I was thrilled finding out new things. Even though this could be considered literary criticism, the writing is more a celebration of what one can enjoy and what one can feel. The style is very conversational, in fact this reminded me a lot of talking about music and books in the store with customers I actually look forward to interacting with. A book that leaves the reader with a lot to think about, and even more to explore.

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