Thorough and thoughtful ... Burt writes in a sober, ruminative fashion that departs from the overheated tone of so much Swift-related commentary. Rather than limit her comparisons to contemporary pop stars, she puts Swift in conversation with writers such as Alexander Pope and Willa Cather. Still, the book ultimately reinforces the consensus among critics, fans, and even haters that Swift’s extraordinary success stems from how ordinary she seems—a consensus that both underplays her achievement and insulates her from critique ... The search for a mote of relatability has led Burt to excuse-making. Any claim for Swift’s genius should reckon with her lapses into imprecision and pompousness. She has the chops to do better than she often does ... That criticism doesn’t hold Swift—who just announced her 12th album, The Life of a Showgirl—to an unfair standard. It recognizes the level she’s long aspired to and has often hit
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