Book Reviewer and Literary Essayist

Diane Scharper

21 articles 2006–2018

Diane Scharper is a writer, poet, and lecturer who contributed book reviews and literary essays to The Weekly Standard from 2006 to 2018. Her pieces frequently explored themes of religion, literature, and biography, reflecting her interests in faith and the humanities. She has taught writing at Johns Hopkins University and authored several books of poetry and prose.

Revisions of Love

May 4, 2018 · Fiction, Love, Books & Arts

Unreliable memories of a passionate affair and its aftermath.

Cleansing Effect

July 21, 2017 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

This is 85-year-old Edna O’Brien's first novel in 10 years, and in interviews, she has said that she found it difficult to write. One could argue that the violent history behind the novel added to her difficulty. For as she explains in a brief preface, the chairs of the title refer to the siege of…

Love in the Shadow of Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

June 10, 2017 · magazine_repost, Books and Art, Israel

Dorit Rabinyan's latest novel chronicles nine months in the lives of Liat, an Israeli woman, and Hilmi, a Palestinian man. The two young adults come separately to New York to study and to make their fortunes. When they meet in the autumn of 2002, they fall immediately in love. But it isn't long…

Irresistible Force

June 9, 2017 · Books and Art, Israel, Love

Dorit Rabinyan's latest novel chronicles nine months in the lives of Liat, an Israeli woman, and Hilmi, a Palestinian man. The two young adults come separately to New York to study and to make their fortunes. When they meet in the autumn of 2002, they fall immediately in love. But it isn't long…

Lazarus Rising

July 21, 2014 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

Did the United States really need a French statue, especially one of colossal proportions? The visionary French sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi thought that it did. And if it weren’t for Bartholdi and his generous nature—to say nothing of his creative idealism—there would be no Statue of…

Horror Hits Home

May 12, 2014 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

In October 1940, the Germans, with help from the Poles, crammed 400,000 Jews into the Warsaw ghetto. They sealed off the ghetto from the rest of the city with six-foot-high walls topped with barbed wire, ensuring that few could escape. If any tried, they were seized, often by Polish “betrayers,”…

In Search of God

April 29, 2013 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, poetry

David Ferry’s latest poems look at the tantalizing possibility of life after death and the existence of God. But it’s a God that the poet doesn’t know and whose name escapes him. What he does know is that he feels a presence, and poems both hide and connect him to that presence. Or, as the…

Love in the Ruins

September 10, 2012 · Diane Scharper, Genocide, Magazine

As Chris Bohjalian tells it, the years between 1915 and 1923 were “the most nightmarish eight years of Armenian history.” Yet the horrific events of that time are generally not included in history courses, and are not so well known outside the Armenian community. No longer. Bohjalian describes what…

Holmes’s Creator

April 23, 2012 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

Michael Dirda, a longtime Sir Arthur Conan Doyle fan, ascribes his critical abilities to Sherlock Holmes. He still remembers the spell cast on him when, during the 1950s in elementary school, he discovered The Hound of the Baskervilles (1902), with its cover “depicting a shadowy Something with…

Men Overboard

June 13, 2011 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

Compass Rose

Write If You Must

March 21, 2011 · Diane Scharper, book reviews, Magazine

Unless It Moves the Human Heart

Who Was She?

August 17, 2009 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

Annie's Ghosts

Revealed Truth

April 21, 2008 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

Our Story Begins

Black Napoleon

March 19, 2007 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

Toussaint Louverture

A Quiet American

February 13, 2006 · Diane Scharper, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Gift of Valor