We should admire Bloom's frequently insightful comments on Mormonism. We can be grateful that others have noted the achievements of Joseph Smith and Brigham Young. We can also say that Bloom hasn't gone far enough. Bloom fails in reading the Book of Mormon; although he prides himself on being a revisionist, he is a tragically conventional reader when reading the central text of Mormonism. Bloom should go further, should accept the extraliterary concerns he has rejected, or accept that they might exist even if they are beyond the range of his experience, or accept that they might be enabling devices for strong readers and their absence disabling devices for weak readers. Bloom is hypnotized by gnosis—knowledge—and doesn't notice that the Latter-day Saints haven't gone about to build gnosis, but to build a house: of prayer, of fasting, of faith, of learning, of glory, of order—a house of God. Bloom thinks that because he is a gnostic, everyone else must be also. The house Joseph began and the one we Latter-day Saints should be continuing construction on isn't simply a house of learning (although it is certainly that), but a more complete house than the one sparkling in the evening light with the breaking of the ground vessels.
Bloom is no anti-Mormon, and I didn't see anywhere in the review that Alan Goff
directly suggested this (unless I'm mistaken), but one could
certainly read that into his commentary. As Kevin noted earlier, at least Bloom has done something that most others won't do - take the Book of Mormon seriously - even if he thinks it's "tendentious".
But this is a sad fact we all have to face up to: Anyone who rejects the Book of Mormon as "literal history", is an "anti-Mormon". We must choose, and there's "no middle ground". No wonder RFM is flourishing.
It's sort of like the car salesman who says, "you can't buy parts of the car, you have to buy the whole car".
I remain in the Joseph Campbell camp. I don't think the Book of Mormon is a fraud, any more than I think Santa Claus is a fraud. Unless you take it all literally.
Perhaps most will not understand this, but you have to be a
literal believer to be
truly disappointed. Once I got rid of that literal belief, disappointment was beyond me.