Benjamin Moser

Writer

Birthday September 14, 1976

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Houston, Texas, United States

Age 47 years old

Nationality United States

#59234 Most Popular

1976

Benjamin Moser (born September 14, 1976) is an American writer and translator.

He received the Pulitzer Prize for his biography of Susan Sontag, titled Sontag: Her Life and Work.

Born in Houston, Moser attended St. John's School and graduated from Brown University with a degree in history.

He came to Brown with the intention of studying Chinese, but soon switched to Portuguese, a choice that would have great influence on his subsequent work.

He earned his M.A. and Ph.D. from Utrecht University.

He is the brother of author and progressive political activist Laura Moser.

2009

Moser’s first book, Why This World, was published in 2009, and was widely recognized as introducing the Brazilian writer Clarice Lispector, up until that point largely unknown in the United States, to an international public.

"Despite a cult following of artists and scholars, Lispector has yet to gain her rightful place in the literary canon," wrote Fernanda Eberstadt in The New York Times Book Review.

"Benjamin Moser’s lively, ardent and intellectually rigorous biography promises to redress this wrong ... His energetically researched, finely argued biography will surely win Lispector the English-language readership she deserves."

Reviews of the book, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award, were overwhelmingly positive.

“This is rich biographical material that gets only richer as Mr. Moser, a translator and a book critic for Harper’s Magazine, begins to unpeel the layers of her complicated life.

Why This World sucks you … into its subject’s strange vortex.

… [Moser] is a lucid and very learned tour guide, and his book is a fascinating and welcome introduction to a writer whose best work should be better known in this country,” wrote Dwight Garner in The New York Times.

In The New York Review of Books, Lorrie Moore wrote that the book was “impressively researched ... Well-written and remarkable ... He discusses her work in great detail, book after book, with sympathy and insight, and admirably eschews jargon ... Moser is impressive ... in his interest and take on Brazilian politics.

Providing authoritative historical backdrop is his forte.”

The book was translated in many countries and was a bestseller in Brazil.

2013

In 2013, he was named the authorized biographer of the American writer Susan Sontag.

2016

In 2016, Moser published a book of essays in Portuguese called Autoimperialismo: três ensaios sobre o Brasil (Autoimperialism: Three Essays on Brazil).

The book was dedicated to Ocupe Estelita.

Ocupe Estelita was an attempt to reclaim Brazilian urban spaces from the corporations that were changing the historic city of Recife, seen as attempts to privatize public space for the benefit of the wealthy.

Proceeds from the book were dedicated to the movement.

In his book, Moser described the constant violence of Brazilians upon other Brazilians as a form of “autoimperialism.” He described the rhetoric around the construction of the capital of Brasília, the statuary in São Paulo that honors the bandeirantes, and the history of building in Rio de Janeiro that aimed to create a city unconnected to its own past through modern architecture.

The book was noted for its harsh criticism of Oscar Niemeyer.

The book received positive reviews and was a bestseller in Brazil.

2019

In 2019, he published Sontag: Her Life and Work, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography in 2020.

The citation called it "An authoritatively constructed work told with pathos and grace, that captures the writer’s genius and humanity alongside her addictions, sexual ambiguities and volatile enthusiasms.

The book received critical attention from a number of outlets.

In Artforum, Terry Castle wrote: “Benjamin Moser’s Sontag.

. . succeeds as it does—magnificently, humanely—by displaying the same intellectual purchase, curiosity, and moral capaciousness to which his subject laid so inspiring and noble a claim over a lifetime.

... Moser’s biography is a stunningly generous gift—to readers, obviously, but also to his subject.

He is patient with her, truthful yet tender, recognizing both what was thrilling and what was cursed about her.”

In the Times Literary Supplement, Elaine Showalter wrote: “Engrossing.

. . [Sontag] was avid, ardent, driven, generous, narcissistic, Olympian, obtuse, maddening, sometimes loveable but not very likeable.

Moser has had the confidence and erudition to bring all these contradictory aspects together in a biography fully commensurate with the scale of his subject.

He is also a gifted, compassionate writer.”

In The New Republic, Leslie Jamison wrote: “Utterly riveting and consistently insightful.

. . The book takes this larger-than-life intellectual powerhouse—formidable, intimidating, often stubbornly impersonal in her work—and makes her life-size again.

. . fascinating.”

In February 2023, it was announced that Kristen Stewart would be playing Sontag in a film adaptation of the book, directed by Kirsten Johnson.

In 2022, Moser published The Upside-Down World, a personal account of his moving to the Netherlands when he was young, and his encounters with the Dutch artists of the age of Rembrandt and Vermeer.