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News and Reviews

Saturday, December 6

Norman had a lively booksigning at Split Rock Books in Cold Spring, New York on Saturday. It's not too late to get copies of the book – they make terrific holiday gifts!
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     "More than a series of critiques about American values and experience, the essays point out the intersection of information, disinformation, and response that have shaped American questions, ideals, and attitudes over the decades . . .
     "As Bender cycles though American experience and presents his own observations of changing life and social issues, readers will especially appreciate how succinct and thought-provoking this blend of history, personal experience, and cultural change can be – as well as how relevant it is to modern American experience . . .
     "Bender provides a host of thought-provoking arguments, insights, and pointed directions for positive solutions to social ailments. This approach will prove especially inviting to classroom and book club discussions about America’s values and direction . . .
     "The result is a collection of hard-hitting observations and history which points the way to new attitudes, progress, and possibilities in a manner that librarians will consider especially intriguing for their collections because it’s accessible to a wide audience of thinkers and ordinary citizens. . .
     "Astute in its considerations, literary in its craft, and thought-provoking in its reflections, Just Off the Norm is highly recommended reading for anyone interested in the past, present, and future of life and culture in America."
—D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer, Midwest Book Review

 

     "Norman L. Bender’s Just Off the Norm: Published Opinions on American Politics and Culture by One of Its Most Trenchant Observers presents an insightful, varied, and likely polarizing collection of political and cultural commentary, portraying several decades of civic engagement through the lens of Bender’s resolute dedication to truth, democracy, and public accountability. . . .
     "What distinguishes Bender’s writing from that of other commentators—and what lends the collection coherence despite its wide-ranging subject matter—is his clear faith in the possibility of moral renewal via public candor. . . .
     "To further illustrate this belief, the early sections of Just Off the Norm, such as “They Had the Presidential Seal” and “To Those Who Served, and to Those Who Loved America So Much They Very Nearly Served,” neatly exemplify Bender’s signature technique: wry political critique anchored in anecdote, humor, and moral clarity. This allows him to elucidate some uncomfortable truths and hypocrisies. . . .
     "Just Off the Norm covers serious ground. The collection of brief, date-stamped essays, including the original publication credits and occasional postscripts, presents a longitudinal study of Bender’s evolving worldview. His postscripts are often micro-essays, reflecting the hindsight of a curious observer who never stops updating his moral ledger. His vantage point is that of a citizen who measures time not in administrations but in arguments. . . .
     "But what renders Just Off the Norm more than an archive of newspaper wit is its emotional throughline. Bender’s reflections on military service are suffused with tenderness and anger, with the pen portraits of fellow veterans, from Chick Aimes to Tom Coady, elevating his opinions beyond punditry. Indeed, they anchor his political skepticism in lived experience and emphatic understanding. . . .
     "Just Off the Norm offers more than partisan commentary. It serves as a record of language under pressure—the way public words can still aspire to moral clarity in a culture of disinformation. Bender’s lifelong insistence that “the truth is in here” (a deliberate inversion of The X-Files motto) positions his work within a democratic tradition of truth-telling that spans national and local perspectives.
     "The collection succeeds not because it overcomes the dilemmas it reveals but because it insists on revealing them again and again. It highlights how civic responsibility begins with attention—to words, to facts, to irony. In a literary culture increasingly detached from journalism, Bender reclaims the op-ed as a moral form. In the face of increasing cynicism, his writing shows the need to keep faith with democracy."
—Reviewed by Erin Britton, Independent Book Review