logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Roger Rosenblatt
ROGER ROSENBLATT is the winner of a Robert F. Kennedy Book Prize, a Peabody Award, an Emmy, and two George Polk awards. He writes essays for Time magazine and for The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. He lives in Manhattan and Quogue, Long Island. show more

ROGER ROSENBLATT is the winner of a Robert F. Kennedy Book Prize, a Peabody Award, an Emmy, and two George Polk awards. He writes essays for Time magazine and for The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. He lives in Manhattan and Quogue, Long Island.
show less
Roger Rosenblatt's Books
Recently added on shelves
Roger Rosenblatt's readers
Share this Author
Community Reviews
Dem
Dem rated it 6 years ago
I fell in love with the cover of this Novel but unfortunately the story didn't hold the same fascination or interest for me. Trying his best to weasel out of an appointment with the neurologist his only child, Máire, has cornered him into, the poet Thomas Murphy—singer of the oldies, friend of the ...
amrhosny54943
amrhosny54943 rated it 10 years ago
كتاب عن ثقافة الاستهلاك فى أمريكا وان الاستهلاك بهذه الطريقة أثر على البيئةلكن الصراحة لم استفد من الكتاب , كميه معلومات قليلة على صفحات كثيرة فحسيت بالملل وانا بقرأ الكتاب
Something to Ponder
Something to Ponder rated it 11 years ago
I received this free from Audible. i am glad I did not purchase it. it was written like diary and a boring one I at that.
megancsparks
megancsparks rated it 13 years ago
The writing in this book is beautiful and spare, but the author comes across as very self-absorbed and the family just a little too perfect. The world written of in this book, with private school, a nanny (who works five 12-hour days a week to take care of one child when there are three other adults...
Boxes of Paper
Boxes of Paper rated it 14 years ago
I really needed an "inspiring writing book" over the last few days, and I think this served quite well. So why the middling rating? Well, while the book was an enjoyable read and a lovely memoir, I found the through-line to be a bit wandering. Rosenblatt structures the book as a narrative of some of...
see community reviews
Need help?