Buy Used
£3.24
+ £2.80 UK delivery
Used: Very Good | Details
Sold by ThriftBooks-USA
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comment: All items ship from the USA.  Arrival time is usually 2-3 weeks. Ex-Library Book - will contain Library Markings. Book has appearance of light use with no easily noticeable wear. Spend Less. Read More. Your satisfaction is guaranteed.

Have one to sell?
Flip to back Flip to front
Listen Playing... Paused   You're listening to a sample of the Audible audio edition.
Learn more
See this image

36 Arguments for the Existence of God: A Work of Fiction Hardcover – 12 Jan 2010

3.7 out of 5 stars 24 customer reviews

See all formats and editions Hide other formats and editions
Amazon Price
New from Used from
Kindle Edition
"Please retry"
Hardcover, 12 Jan 2010
£3.24

Top Deals in Books
See the latest top deals in Books. Shop now
click to open popover

Enter your mobile number or email address below and we'll send you a link to download the free Kindle App. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.

  • Apple
  • Android
  • Windows Phone

To get the free app, enter your mobile phone number.



Top Deals in Books
See the latest top deals in Books. Shop now

Product details

  • Hardcover: 402 pages
  • Publisher: Pantheon Books; 1 edition (12 Jan. 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0307378187
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307378187
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 3.5 x 24.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 4,997,665 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

"Dazzling, and sparked by frequent flashes of nonchalant brilliance."--"The New York Times
"
"Brainy, compassionate, divinely witty."--"The Washington Post
"
"[A] literary miracle."--Maureen Corrigan, "Fresh Air," NPR
"Rebecca Goldstein is a rare find among contemporary novelists: she has intellectual muscle as well as a tender emotional reach." --Ian McEwan
"Deeply moving and a joy to read." --Jonathan Safran Foer, author of "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close"
"Captivating, original, and at times riotously funny." --"Commentary"
"Compelling, heady . . . and laced with a deliciously dark wit." --"Boston Globe"
"Thoughtful, witty, and--I cannot stress enough--really entertaining." --"Christian Science Monitor"
"Goldstein can make Spinoza sing and GOdel comprehensible, and in her cerebral fiction she dances across disciplines with delight...."36 Arguments" radiates all the humor and erudition we've come to expect from Goldstein, and despite the novel's attention to the oldest questions, it has arrived at exactly the right moment. ... One of the funniest [academic satires] ever written. ...Goldstein doesn't want to shake your faith or confirm it, but she'll make you a believer in the power of fiction."--"The" "Washington Post
"
"When Rebecca Goldstein, the American philosopher-novelist who looks like Rapunzel but thinks like Wittgenstein, was awarded the prestigious MacArthur Award (commonly known as the "genius award") in 1996, she was praised for her ability to "dramatise the concerns of philosophy without sacrificing the demands of imaginative storytelling." That is putting her achievements lightly. Her most recent book, "36 Arguments for the Existence of God," is a vast....which is nonetheless possessed of a steely intellectual coherence that is frighteningly impressive to behold."--"The Times "(London)
""36 Arguments for the Existence of God" affirms Ms. Goldstein's rare ability to explore the quotidian and the cosmological with equal ease. ...The novel's bracing intellectual energy never flags. ... It affirms Ms. Goldstein's position as a satirist and a seeker of real moral questions at a time when silly ones prevail."--" The New York Times
"
"Hilariously irreverent. . . . The draw of transcendental longings, Seltzer discovers, is not to be found in logical proofs but in the accumulated wonder of all that can be encountered in this life: love, family, the sheer privilege of being alive." --"Financial Times" (London)
"400 pages of smarts....["36 Arguments] "lays out a great range of witticisms, echoes and allusions." --"London Review of Books
"
"Like an answer to a fevered prayer. ... Part academic farce, part metaphysical romance, all novel of ideas, "36 Arguments for the Existence of God" may not settle the question of whether God exists but it does affirm the phenomenon of literary miracles."--Maureen Corrigan, "Fresh Air," NPR
"A looping tale [with] affectionate irony about academic life, culture wars, and relationships in turn-of-the-millennium America....[With] the same engaging cocktail of philosophy, roman a clef fun, and scholarly soap opera that marked her earlier books....She shows off all her considerable smarts. . . . Playful, humane." --"The Globe and Mail "(Toronto)
"The best Jewish woman writing in America today....Her latest, "36 Arguments for the Existence of God" is flat out the most gratifying novel--woman's, Jewish, American, whatever--this reviewer has read in many a long reading season. "36" triumphs in a whole bunch of literary subgenres....[It is] a novel whose manifold delights can only be hinted at in a review. "36 Arguments for the Existence of God" is brimming with richly realized characters, brimming with ideas, brimming with life."--"The Jerusalem Report
"
"[Goldstein] has taken on some of the deepest, philosophical questions of human existence and shaped them into a page-turner at once funny and heartbreaking and challenging and--yes--proves that there's no such thing as 'too smart' to write a terrifically engaging novel." --"Moment Magazine"
"When a writer is as clever as Goldstein, it does not seem fair that she should also write with charm, humour, and emotional acuity. But that is the package on offer in this ingenious and heartwarming novel. ... A delightful novel, which could be one of the literary hits of the year."--"The Mail on Sunday "(London)
"A remarkable novel--as entertaining as it is illuminating--savagely funny in its characterizations, brilliant in its contemplation of the self and the sublime. This is a timely and timeless book, and definitive proof of Rebecca Newberger Goldstein's protean intellect and engaging talent."--Jess Walter, author of "The Zero
"
"An enjoyable feast of ideas that also serves as a very funny satire on the politics of campus life."--"Times Literary Supplement" (London)
"Thoughtful, witty, and--I cannot stress enough--really entertaining, "36 Arguments" is part campus comedy, part romantic farce, part philosophical treatise. It is also, without question, the smartest kid in class.... Not since "The Tao of Pooh" has philosophy been so much fun."--"Christian Science Monitor"
"Rebecca Newberger Goldstein does it all. She has written a hilarious novel about people's existential agonies, a page-turner about the intellectual mysteries that obsess them. The characters in "36 Arguments For the Existence of God "explore the great moral issues of our day in a novel that is deeply moving and a joy to read."--Jonathan Safran Foer, author of "Everything is Illuminated
"
"A tour de force showcasing Goldstein's intent intellect and vast knowledge.""--The Daily Beast
"
"Goldstein's glorious novel celebrates the perils, pitfalls and profound joys of a life of the mind and spirit."--"Jewish Chronicle "(London)
"Goldstein is a brilliant exponent of her subject, and she has crafted a story that is caustically irreverent, yet provocative and informative without being completely didactic. And....by the end, "36 Arguments" is also deeply touching."--"Boston Globe
"
"Satire with a soul."--"Chronicle of Higher Education
"
"Triumphant....With wicked comic genius, the book masterfully manipulates philosophers and their principles, kabbalistic literature and its acolytes, and a whole series of paradoxical ideas that live, breathe, and take on lives of their own." --"The Jewish Week "
"["36 Arguments"] prove[s] that you can be both smart and funny, that Albert Einstein and Albert Brooks have a lot more in common than their first names. . . . The payoff is sublime." --"Chicago Tribune"
"In elegant and often hysterical prose. . . . [Goldstein] leaves us with a way to think about what having a soul might actually mean." --"The American Prospect"
"A charming story, deftly told, crackling with intelligence." --"Huffington Post"
" "
"Highly entertaining. . . . Clever and witty. . . . [With] delightful characters. . . . "36 Arguments for the Existence of God" will give you lots to laugh about as well as lots to think about." --"Psychology Today"
" "
"Impressively succeeds in combining esoteric philosophical argument and laugh-out-loud humour. ... The cleverest and most entertaining novel I have read for a long time."--Robert Colbeck, "Yorkshire Evening Post"
"Goldstein is, as always, a lovely and thoughtful writer. Her respect and understanding for her characters might well earn her the epithet 'philosophical novelist with a soul'."-- "New Scientist
"
"[A] greatly entertaining novel."--"Daily Mail" (London)
"A high-energy caper in which religion, relativism, passion, and primitivism meet in the brainy collisions and collusions of a best-selling scholar, ex-lovers, rabbis, cosmologists, and one tiny math prodigy.""--Elle," "Trust Us: This Month's Quick Picks,"
"A hilarious novel that will add fuel to the debate that Richard Dawkins has made a million-pound industry. Rebecca Goldstein has penned a great story that will steal some of Dawkins' action....An intellectual delight." -"The Bookseller" (UK)
"This novel brims with ideas about the nature of religion and how humans interact with it....It's refreshing to read a novel so bursting with intellectual rigor." -"The Big Issue
"
"A bonbon for both intellect and funny bone, "36 Arguments" is a delicious entertainment." --"Montreal Gazette"
"Fascinating. . . . Funny. . . . Effervescent and knowing. . . . A lovely dream." --Jane Smiley, "Los Angeles Times"

Dazzling, and sparked by frequent flashes of nonchalant brilliance. "The New York Times
"
Brainy, compassionate, divinely witty. "The Washington Post
"
[A] literary miracle. Maureen Corrigan, Fresh Air, NPR
Rebecca Goldstein is a rare find among contemporary novelists: she has intellectual muscle as well as a tender emotional reach. Ian McEwan
Deeply moving and a joy to read. Jonathan Safran Foer, author of "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close"
Captivating, original, and at times riotously funny. "Commentary"
Compelling, heady . . . and laced with a deliciously dark wit. "Boston Globe"
Thoughtful, witty, and I cannot stress enough really entertaining. "Christian Science Monitor"
"Goldstein can make Spinoza sing and Godel comprehensible, and in her cerebral fiction she dances across disciplines with delight ."36 Arguments" radiates all the humor and erudition we've come to expect from Goldstein, and despite the novel's attention to the oldest questions, it has arrived at exactly the right moment. ... One of the funniest [academic satires] ever written. ...Goldstein doesn't want to shake your faith or confirm it, but she'll make you a believer in the power of fiction." "The""Washington Post
"
"When Rebecca Goldstein, the American philosopher-novelist who looks like Rapunzel but thinks like Wittgenstein, was awarded the prestigious MacArthur Award (commonly known as the genius award ) in 1996, she was praised for her ability to dramatise the concerns of philosophy without sacrificing the demands of imaginative storytelling . That is putting her achievements lightly. Her most recent book, "36 Arguments for the Existence of God," is a vast .which is nonetheless possessed of a steely intellectual coherence that is frighteningly impressive to behold." "The Times"(London)
"36 Arguments for the Existence of God"affirms Ms. Goldstein s rare ability to explore the quotidian and the cosmological with equal ease. ...The novel s bracing intellectual energy never flags. ... It affirms Ms. Goldstein s position as a satirist and a seeker of real moral questions at a time when silly ones prevail." " The New York Times
"
Hilariously irreverent. . . . The draw of transcendental longings, Seltzer discovers, is not to be found in logical proofs but in the accumulated wonder of all that can be encountered in this life: love, family, the sheer privilege of being alive. "Financial Times" (London)
400 pages of smarts .["36 Arguments] "lays out a great range of witticisms, echoes and allusions. "London Review of Books
"
"Like an answer to a fevered prayer. ... Part academic farce, part metaphysical romance, all novel of ideas, "36 Arguments for the Existence of God"may not settle the question of whether God exists but it does affirm the phenomenon of literary miracles." Maureen Corrigan, Fresh Air, NPR
A looping tale [with] affectionate irony about academic life, culture wars, and relationships in turn-of-the-millennium America .[With] the same engaging cocktail of philosophy, roman a clef fun, and scholarly soap opera that marked her earlier books .She shows off all her considerable smarts. . . . Playful, humane. "The Globe and Mail "(Toronto)
"The best Jewish woman writing in America today....Her latest, "36 Arguments for the Existence of God" is flat out the most gratifying novel woman's, Jewish, American, whatever this reviewer has read in many a long reading season."36"triumphs in a whole bunch of literary subgenres .[It is] a novel whose manifold delights can only be hinted at in a review."36 Arguments for the Existence of God"is brimming with richly realized characters, brimming with ideas, brimming with life." "The Jerusalem Report
"
[Goldstein] has taken on some of the deepest, philosophical questions of human existence and shaped them into a page-turner at once funny and heartbreaking and challenging and yes proves that there s no such thing as too smart to write a terrifically engaging novel. "Moment Magazine"
"When a writer is as clever as Goldstein, it does not seem fair that she should also write with charm, humour, and emotional acuity. But that is the package on offer in this ingenious and heartwarming novel. ... A delightful novel, which could be one of the literary hits of the year." "The Mail on Sunday "(London)
A remarkable novel as entertaining as it is illuminating savagely funny in its characterizations, brilliant in its contemplation of the self and the sublime. This is a timely and timeless book, and definitive proof of Rebecca Newberger Goldstein s protean intellect and engaging talent. Jess Walter, author of"The Zero
"
"An enjoyable feast of ideas that also serves as a very funny satire on the politics of campus life." "Times Literary Supplement" (London)
"Thoughtful, witty, and I cannot stress enough really entertaining, "36 Arguments" is part campus comedy, part romantic farce, part philosophical treatise. It is also, without question, the smartest kid in class . Not since"The Tao of Pooh"has philosophy been so much fun." "Christian Science Monitor"
"Rebecca Newberger Goldstein does it all. She has written a hilarious novel about people s existential agonies, a page-turner about the intellectual mysteries that obsess them. The characters in"36 Arguments For the Existence of God"explore the great moral issues of our day in a novel that is deeply moving and a joy to read." Jonathan Safran Foer, author of"Everything is Illuminated
"
"A tour de force showcasing Goldstein s intent intellect and vast knowledge."" The Daily Beast
"
"Goldstein s glorious novel celebrates the perils, pitfalls and profound joys of a life of the mind and spirit." "Jewish Chronicle "(London)
Goldstein is a brilliant exponent of her subject, and she has crafted a story that is caustically irreverent, yet provocative and informative without being completely didactic. And .by the end, "36 Arguments" is also deeply touching. "Boston Globe
"
"Satire with a soul." "Chronicle of Higher Education
"
Triumphant .With wicked comic genius, the book masterfully manipulates philosophers and their principles, kabbalistic literature and its acolytes, and a whole series of paradoxical ideas that live, breathe, and take on lives of their own. "The Jewish Week "
["36 Arguments"] prove[s] that you can be both smart and funny, that Albert Einstein and Albert Brooks have a lot more in common than their first names. . . . The payoff is sublime. "Chicago Tribune"
In elegant and often hysterical prose. . . . [Goldstein] leaves us with a way to think about what having a soul might actually mean. "The American Prospect"
A charming story, deftly told, crackling with intelligence. "Huffington Post"
""
Highly entertaining. . . . Clever and witty. . . . [With] delightful characters. . . . "36 Arguments for the Existence of God" will give you lots to laugh about as well as lots to think about. "Psychology Today"
""
"Impressively succeeds in combining esoteric philosophical argument and laugh-out-loud humour. ... The cleverest and most entertaining novel I have read for a long time." Robert Colbeck, "Yorkshire Evening Post"
"Goldstein is, as always, a lovely and thoughtful writer. Her respect and understanding for her characters might well earn her the epithet 'philosophical novelist with a soul ." "New Scientist
"
"[A] greatly entertaining novel." "Daily Mail" (London)
"A high-energy caper in which religion, relativism, passion, and primitivism meet in the brainy collisions and collusions of a best-selling scholar, ex-lovers, rabbis, cosmologists, and one tiny math prodigy."" Elle," "Trust Us: This Month's Quick Picks,"
A hilarious novel that will add fuel to the debate that Richard Dawkins has made a million-pound industry. Rebecca Goldstein has penned a great story that will steal some of Dawkins action .An intellectual delight. "The Bookseller" (UK)
This novel brims with ideas about the nature of religion and how humans interact with it .It s refreshing to read a novel so bursting with intellectual rigor. "The Big Issue
"
A bonbon for both intellect and funny bone, "36 Arguments" is a delicious entertainment. "Montreal Gazette"
Fascinating. . . . Funny. . . . Effervescent and knowing. . . . A lovely dream. Jane Smiley, "Los Angeles Times"" --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Rebecca Newberger Goldstein received her doctorate in philosophy from Princeton University. Her award-winning books include the novels "The Mind-Body Problem, Properties of Light, " and "Mazel, " and nonfiction studies of Kurt Godel and Baruch Spinoza. She has received a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship and Guggenheim and Radcliffe fellowships, and she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005. She lives in Massachusetts." --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?

Customer Reviews

3.7 out of 5 stars
Share your thoughts with other customers

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
I came to this novel through Steven Pinker's books. I love everything he has written and Rebecca Goldstein is his wife, a novelist and philosopher and respected academic in her own right. Sounds goods, and it certainly starts out brilliantly. Cass Seltzer is a real heart-throb (famale authors' male heroes invariably are - c/f Rhett Butler or Peter Whimsy) a thoughtful intellectual, keen on sex in a diffident, cuddly, way, notably tall, a best-selling author and accidental millionaire. I then started to get irritated by Ms Goldstein's lack of faith in the intelligence of her reader. Look, Rebecca, if a reader is willing to take on this novel, they do not need things explained to them twice. Such as Euclid's proof of the infinity of primes, Pascale's take on probability theory, or how students might write 'Toga Party' using Greek letters. If you are reading a book and you don't 'get' something, you can reread the passage, right? If the author repeats the same idea twice it is boring and patronising. Similarly, her main comic character is Cass's one time PhD tutor, a Professor called Jonas Elijah Klapper. You've probably guessed from his name that he represents the 'Claptrap' spun in many US university humanities departments; he is also meant to be very clever. Ms Goldstein has a series of characters pop up and explain both these facts to us, and then throws in a lot of the actual clap-trap for good measure. She does occasionally manage to illustrate his insights, but fewer than are needed to justify his appeal to his students. Give the devil some good lines. Somehow Dickens created conceited, boring buffoons and yet made them funny characters we want to read about. Klapper misses that level of appeal. He is meant to be unattractive and pontificating, and he is, and we are told he is.Read more ›
Comment 36 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse
Format: Hardcover
This book is a good example of the type of fiction that results when a highly educated and intelligent person with no conspicuous literary talent sets out to write a novel. Anyone reading through the Appendix, in which Rebecca Goldstein sets out thirty-six arguments that have been deployed in favour of a belief in God - and anatomises their flaws - can hardly doubt the author's understanding of her subject, and a glance at her intellectual CV is reassuring. But success in fiction demands something more: and 36 Arguments rarely rises to those demands.

It may at first seem as though this will be one of those clever 'list' novels that structures itself around a seemingly arbitrary trope - as, for example, Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities, in which each section is devoted to a description of one of the imagined cities that Marco Polo describes to Kublai Khan - that turns out to be a cunningly contrived conceptual armature. In fact the structure of Goldstein's novel doesn't follow Goldstein's list of her 36 arguments, and the book is far from a post-modernist tour-de-force. What we have here is a perfectly conventional - I almost said middlebrow - novel of American academic life with a strongly Jewish flavour. The point of the title appears to be merely that the central theme is belief: not just religious belief, but the kinds of belief that make human life possible - self-belief or its absence, our belief in others, our beliefs concerning the purposes and values that govern our lives - and the tension between belief and reason.

I feel that the book's religious concerns might make more sense - or at least seem more urgent - to an American public used to a more visible, charismatic and confident religious presence in everyday life than is the case in the UK.
Read more ›
5 Comments 13 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse
Format: Paperback
This book is about a hero I didn't care about, two self-centred women he has loved, his self-aggrandizing guru, an OK ex-girlfriend and a likeable rabbi. Does this sound like it has the makings of a witty engaging and stimulating book? No. It is verbose, over-intellectual and boring. Vast tracts are taken up with barely relevant information about Judaism. Huge speeches are reported verbatim to help us understand how pompous the guru is. Rebecca Goldstein is perfectly happy to subject us to sentences lasting for over a page, by which time ordinary people like me have forgotten the beginning. It all just seems like showing off. And how presumptious to tell us that a character (Lucinda) is a genius and then quote her supposedly stunning speeches and arguments - obviously only an author of equal intellect could do this.

If this book is about God it passed me by. It's just a book about a professor who is interested in the psychology of religion, and his relationships with the unpleasant characters he is attracted to. The appendix does go through 36 arguments and refutes each one in turn but I didn't feel moved to read it. You could see what the content would be from the index without having to get into the tedious nitty gritty.

I am always suspicious of books like this that jump backwards and forwards in time. Do they do it because they can't think of any other way of adding interest? Are we supposed to be so busy remembering where we are that we don't notice that the underlying story is so dull that it can't be told straight?

The best thing about this book was that I didn't waste any time reading on to see what happened when I should have been doing something else. No late nights reading into the small hours. I just couldn't care about any of the characters, except perhaps the Rabbi. The reviews on the front quoting words like 'hilarious' must have been written by people who have spent too long in academia.
Comment 7 people found this helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No Sending feedback...
Thank you for your feedback.
Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try again
Report abuse

Most Recent Customer Reviews


Look for similar items by category


Feedback