The breadth and depth of Lawrence L. Langer’s reading of these three major works is masterful. In a time of slavish devotion to domineering hierarchies, Langer’s book makes the case for “balance and reciprocity as the ideal goals of social existence” as arrived at through mutuality, while also acknowledging the tension between “the world of ought and the world of is” explored by Milton, Melville, and Dostoevsky. Readers can only be thankful for the wisdom and intelligence on display here, as well as the author’s deep commitment to literature, life, and human love.