From renowned intellectual and historian Michael Ignatieff comes a moving portrait of artists, writers, politicians, emperors, and poets overcoming tragedy and crisis – an ancient tradition of consolation which will resonate with readers in our turbulent times.
An extraordinary meditation on loss and mortality - drawing on all of Michael Ignatieff’s powers as a philosopher, a historian, a politician and a man. His portraits of figures such as Hume and Montaigne are sharp and dignified, troubling and consoling, thoughtful and deeply humane.
In an age when we are so much in need of solace, Michael Ignatieff went looking for it in texts
and times whose assumptions are profoundly different from our own. The result is a secular
reinterpretation of a landscape that has often seemed visible only through a religious lens: it is
elegant, humane and intensely rewarding.
A
wonderful balance of literary survey and personal reflection, this book is wide-ranging, moving, and stylishly written. It makes the perfect introduction to
a genre that never goes out of fashion.Reading this book is like taking a walk along a winding path with a dear friend and sharing life’s travails. But the friend keeps metamorphosing - into Montaigne or Marx or Mahler, Anna Akhmatova or Albert Camus. At the end, you feel enlivened, fortified, and somehow just a little wiser.
This is a bold, brilliant, and yes, moving book.Illuminating and moving, these wide-ranging portraits of men and women seeking answers in dark times - from the Book of Job to Montaigne, from Cicero to Akhmatova, and on to today's palliative care - appeals to us all, as a universal quest and an intimate personal testament.
It is at once illuminating, moving and consoling, to follow Michael Ignatieff as he searches for
moments of consolation across the centuries. With resolute honesty Ignatieff follows the search
into his own inner life, grappling, as we all must do, with failure, loss, and death.
This is
an extraordinarily moving book. The idea of solidarity in time is itelf consoling, amidst so much loss: in Ignatieff’s words, “we are not alone, and we never have been”.
On Consolation is splendidly immune to the panics of our age. Written with eloquence in an
affecting spirit of humility by a man of uncommon intelligence, for many of its readers this
book will be—is there any higher praise for a study of this subject?—useful.”
A
passionate, thought-provoking, unpredictable book.
Human problems are like crystals: they have so many faces that they must be turned over and
around many times in order to see every side. Michael Ignatieff’s ruminative On
Consolation does that artfully. Reading his memorable portraits of historical figures
who needed, sought, lost, or found consolation leaves the reader with a deeper appreciation of
the profound challenges and possibilities that life lays before every one of us.
Michael Ignatieff is a writer, historian and former politician. He has taught at Cambridge, Oxford, the University of Toronto and Harvard and is currently university professor at Central European University in Vienna. His books, which have been translated into twelve languages, include
Blood and Belonging,
Isaiah Berlin: a life,
The Needs of Strangers,
The Russian Album and
The Ordinary Virtues.