The Fate of Ideas is a brilliant, highly original, and delightful book that achieves a unique balance between criticism and personal essay, revealing the author himself as both a decisive thinker and an appealingly flawed, divided human being. Looking at a wide range of ideas by peeling away attendant presuppositions and contradictions, Robert Boyers argues with friends, intellectual heroes, and respected elders while examining his own prejudices. Throughout we find ourselves in the company of a first-rate mind alert to changes in intellectual fashion and the quickness with which politically or aesthetically 'correct' assumptions harden into received ideas. -- Phillip Lopate, director (nonfiction) of the Writing Program, Columbia University School of the Arts, and author of Getting Personal: Selected Essays In a dance that is both demanding and exhilarating, Robert Boyers engages thinkers and ideas, insisting there are things worth arguing about that are larger and grander than the standard scholarly or academic discourse can get at. An elegant and courageous book. -- Mary Gordon, Mcintosh Professor, Barnard College, author of The Company of Women This book is a combination of memoir and cultural criticism, though all of the chapters shed light on the protean character of the author, a prominent cultural critic and-perhaps above all-the founder and longtime editor of the quarterly Salmagundi. Whatever form they take-some chapters are deeply personal, others are largely polemical-all are thought experiments, essays often ironic and self-deprecating, Emersonian in the sense that Robert Boyers is unabashed in his 'appetite for masters and masterpieces' that can become 'a constitutive aspect of my very being.' A superb and singular work. -- James Miller, director of liberal studies, graduate faculty, New School for Social Research, author of The Passion of Michel Foucault An attractive, original, subtle, and heartening book that combines the methods of the moral and personal essay with informal literary and cultural criticism. -- Richard Locke, Columbia University, author of Critical Children: The Use of Childhood in Ten Great Novels The 12 literary essays collected in this volume are bottomless wells of provocation and insight... Readers who crave rich food for thought will find much to savor in this volume. Publisher's Weekly (starred review) Boyers's intellectual rigor and literary acuity showcase the life's work of an individual deeply committed to the liberal arts. A timely collection... Essential. Choice