The reader cannot help noticing that Mr. Damrosch’s intellectual odyssey doesn’t feature stops in Germany or Russia, two countries with many great writers...Regardless of its ostensible departures and arrivals, Around the World in 80 Books is a narrative in which lines on the map tend to blur ... it’s a shame that a book so rooted in intellectual history doesn’t have an index ... There’s pleasure aplenty in Around the World in 80 Books, which includes lively essays on popular entertainments ... Mr. Damrosch offers succinct assessments of treasured titles in his library and tempts us to make them our own. Like a tour guide pointing travelers beyond the bus window, he nudges readers to notice parts of the global literary landscape they might have missed ... In a book that takes its narrative scheme from Verne’s whimsical story, readers might not be fully prepared for such gravitas. Mr. Damrosch’s itinerary...involves emotional shifts that can create the literary equivalent of jet lag ... But while Mr. Damrosch arranges his essays to simulate a trip, they can be sampled in any order, easily accommodating a reader’s mood. The eclectic range of his material evokes the cultural oscillations of last year’s lockdowns, when many of us couldn’t quite decide if we wanted to divert our minds or deepen them...All of which invites the question: Will Mr. Damrosch’s book, written in the shadow of a global health emergency, be remembered primarily as a curious artifact of that strange season in the life of the world?
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