The Book of Daniel: A Novel (Modern Library)

by Edgar Lawrence Doctorow
The Book of Daniel: A Novel (Modern Library)  
published 2005 by Modern Library
binding Hardcover
isbn 0679643370   (isbn13: 9780679643371)
pages 320
description The central figure of this novel is a young man whose parents were executed for conspiring to steal atomic secrets for Russia.

His name is Da...more
date added
01-05-07



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Kim
03/21/08

bookshelves: fucking-amazing
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: any history/political junkie... or anyone else
"Obviously there are political implications."

A stray, but emblematic sentence, from this fascinating chronicle of America as seen through the tributaries of its most prestigious and threatening institutions.

This novel tells the tale of the infamous Rosenberg trial/execution(s), through the lens of their son, Daniel, who is dealt with the hardest hand of trying to “make sense” of and understand not only the death of his parents, but the country in which he lives. Daniel...more
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Steven
03/11/08

bookshelves: 1001, americanhistory, law-and-lit
Read in March, 2001
Ficitional account of the events surrounding Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Although this book was written much later, it was assigned as part of my "Law and Literature" class in law school to represent the period of the 1950s and it could not have been a better choice.

So many people think of the 1950s in America with such fondness as a simpler time wherre things were great for everyone. Well, not really. It certainly wasn't so great if you were black and it certainly was not so gr...more
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Summer
Summer rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
04/27/07

bookshelves: 2007, novels
I loved the prose style, and the subject matter was heavy and riviting, but this book suffered from having an utterly unlikeable narrator and from that irritating brand of misogyny that one so often sees in the writing of progressives in that era. Every woman in this book, including the narrator's mother and sister, is described in terms of her fuckability. And let's not forget the sexual violence!

I suppose this is supposed to make the narrator levels of complexity, a tortured aspect, a cou...more
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Andy
10/01/07

Read in October, 2006
recommends it for: those who question the motives of our country.
More than a book about the fictional son of a couple based on the Rosenbergs, it is a book that uses the framework of that story to ask meaningful questions about the motives of our country. The crtique on Disneyland, its ties to the American war machine and its function to provide literature to the illiterate was one of the most scathing parts of the book. Daniel is a complex character and the reader slowly gets a full aspect of his thought processes as he traces the day that his parents were a...more
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Anna
11/14/07

Read in November, 2007
City of God, another one of the ELD's works was one of, if not, the worst books I've read in the last five years. Perhaps it was just because the bar was low, but I was genuinely surprised this book was comparatively better. ELD has the tendency to add layers rather than substance. For example in the Book of Daniel, there is the story of the parents, the history/symbolic asides, and then the metafiction (Daniel writing the book as his dissertation). I'm not against metafiction or post...more
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Christina
bookshelves: 2006
Read in December, 2006
I loved this book. I've never read about this time period before so that was very interesting. I thought the book very well written. I'd previously read a short story by Doctorow and I liked his writing style so I was ready to love this book. When I first started it I found it hard to follow because the narration changes frequently and without warning, sometimes within the same sentence. Daniel was not the least bit likable and actually quite crazy. But I finally got used to the writing and was ...more
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Kristin
Brilliant. One of the best books written about the "event" that was the Rosenbergs (read with Kushner's "Angels in America" and [for a heaping of sardonic satire] Coover's _The Public Burning_). Doctorow draws us into questions of self, nation, and other that feel particularly relevant during this time of "patriot acts." A must-read for anyone interested in postwar American lit.
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Grey
05/21/08

This book is INCREDIBLE, the best book I've ever read. The writing style is difficult and the subject matter extensive, there is intended deep meaning on every page. Highly referential, it's great for history and/or political buffs- especially of 1950s America. I was lucky to read this book with others and really wade through the nuts and bolts, otherwise iI may not have "gotten it". Beautiful, gutsy and resinating; it's the good read high I'm now chasing.
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Mazzengamaria
Solid fictional meditation on on the effects of McCarthyism on public life and individual pysychological development. Told from the perspective of the orphaned son of fictional Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. I like Doctorow a lot, but I wonder if his penchant to write cruelty into his narrators' actions is examined, or a way of working out his own nasty peccadilloes. Not knowing makes me a little uneasy reading some of his work, this book included.
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W.
01/10/08

Call it the predictable loves of the white liberal male, but his allegories of American evil and American goodness work for me, and I like fucked up characters in books as much as I like fucked up characters in life. So I enjoyed this book muchly, although I read it more than a decade ago. I rememember mentally underlining certain sentences because they were so architectonically perfect. Mad props.
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Rachel
09/11/07

Read in July, 2003
recommends it for: people
Good writing draws you into Daniel's investigation of his past and how it fits (or doesn't fit) into a particular time in U.S history. In the end, the question of his parents innocence is unimportant. If you like this, try Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. Totally different subject matter, same feeling of being lured deeper and deeper into a story.
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Robert
10/18/07

Read in October, 2007
The Book of Daniel is a thoughtful, pointed critique of the dark inner workings behind McCarthy-era America's atmosphere of fear and intimidation. E.L. Doctorow shifts from third-person to first-person and employs several characters as narrators, giving the literary equivalent of a cubist rendering of a family based on the Rosenbergs.
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Janet
Janet rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
01/25/08

Read in January, 2000
One of my all time favorites, this book is especially timely considering today's political climate here in the US. Have read a few times, and always get something new out of it. Really recommend it, even if you're less of a politico and just want a strong narrative with lyrical punch. Go, Doctorow!
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Eric
07/20/07

recommends it for: communists, peeps into politics
interesting mish-mash of voices, some cool stylistic moments (the disneyland analysis near the end is so Baudrillard-before-he-even-wrote-about-that it's amazing) but also ends up sounding preachy at points even while it's trying to avoid that. A little dated but still good.
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Jim
12/03/07

There are certain books that remind me that true genius does exist - this is one of them. That World's Fair received much more acclaim than this book disappoints me, not because World's Fair isn't good, but because it oozes with the sentiment that this book shies away from.
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jackie
07/30/07

A fictionalized telling of the persecution of the Rosenbergs from the perspective of their son, Daniel. One of the more provocative historical fictions that I've read. Did they do it? Does it matter? Etc.. I'm really into the Jew lit right now. (Almost an honorary)
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Ivan
07/30/08

Read in July, 2008
I'm still contemplating this one, which is good, I suppose. Looking forward to discussing it, in particular the point of view shifts, integration of history, place description (helpful for the recent discussion of my book, I think), likability of the narrator, etc.
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Penelope
Read in March, 2007
recommends it for: no one
Well, all the reviews I've read of this book suggest that it is a masterpiece. Unfortunately, I and my book club hated it. None of us could feel any empathy for Daniel or any of the characters. We also felt that the writing style itself was very difficult.
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Jahan
12/14/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in November, 2007
The was powerful book, well written with a captivating complexity upon which like a pedestal rested a fragile story, an intimate family story that enriches the readers mind whilst breaking hairline cracks into the outside of our modern superficial hearts.
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Wendy
Wendy rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/02/07

Read in March, 2007
recommends it for: serious readers
Thid is a heavy book about a heavy subject. American during the late 40's and the McCarthy era and the story of the Rosenbergs told as fiction, through the eyes of their son. A considered view of the ever present right wing in America...then and now.
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.91 (471 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.83 (70 ratings)
number of reviews: 50






other editions

The Book of Daniel (Paperback)
The Book of Daniel: A Novel (Paperback)
Book of Daniel (Paperback)