"This urgent and eloquent book compels readers to ask: How can literature help us in a time of climate and social crisis? If T. S. Eliot seems like an odd choice for addressing this question, Patrick Query helps us to read with rather than against Eliot. A dominant figure in modernism and influential poet-critic who shaped the humanities through the New Criticism, Eliot turns out to be a perfect subject for considering why literary studies matter now. Taking an exciting and necessary approach to literary criticism, Query asks us to go outside of our comfortable disciplinary boundaries to think about why we read in a time of crisis." — Megan Quigley, coeditor of Eliot Now"T. S. Eliot is frequently, reverentially invoked by conservative commentators. Such commentators are so self-assured in presupposing that, because Eliot shares their commitments to Christian and Western cultural traditions, he must also share their libertarianism, isolationism, and xenophobia. Without shoehorning Eliot into any contemporary political formation, Patrick Query succeeds in showing us an Eliot who is neither a ventriloquist's dummy nor a strawman. This is not the doctrinaire Eliot who can be cynically deployed. Nor the revanchist one who can be safely ignored." — Matt Seybold, coeditor of The Routledge Companion to Literature and Economics