"You are not obligated to agree with him and you are not obligated to like him, but if you care about the enlarging necessity of contest in cultural discourse, then you are obligated to read him, not with some magical 'open mind'--Fish has no patience for that concept--but with the full force of the mind you have."--The New Republic "Stanley Fish makes you think. No matter what you thought, or thought you thought, on a given subject--Israel, academia, pickup basketball, American law--Fish will flip it and spin it and dip it and turn it around for you. (And he can be a terrific comedian to boot.) A brilliant book."--Mark Edmundson, author of Why Read? "Lucid, sinewy sentences lash, tickle, and caress."--Kirkus(Starred Review) "[Fish] covers so much ground so thoughtfully. Whether he is writing about French theory, religion, poetry, law, liberal education, or politics in upstate New York--where he tries hard to be just an ordinary guy (in his country home--Fish is both stimulating and precise."--The Chronicle of Higher Education "Engaging, provocative, maddening, humorous, and insightful."--Arts Fuse "Think Again is a memorable achievement, offering a standard of argument rarely published in media."--The Australian "Stimulating."--The Weekly Standard "We are rarely in doubt about what Fish intends; there is small danger of his ever saying nothing; and his thoughts continually encourage us to think again as the implications of what he has written expand variously."--Brooke Horvath, Rain Taxi
"This collection of Stanley Fish's New York Times essays amounts to an intellectual autobiography of one of America's most interesting writers. As Fish says, his purpose isn't, as in most op-eds, to tell the reader what to think; rather, it's to illuminate Fish's view of how to think—and to shake readers out of their complacent assumptions about free speech, religion, academia, and other subjects."—Linda Greenhouse, author of The U.S. Supreme Court: A Very Short Introduction