Where I'm Reading From
The Changing World of Books
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- £6.99
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- £6.99
Publisher Description
Should you finish every book you start?
How has your family influenced the way you read?
What is literary style?
How is the Nobel Prize like the World Cup?
Why do you hate the book your friend likes?
Is writing really just like any other job?
What happens to your brain when you read a good book?
As a novelist, translator and critic, Tim Parks is well-placed to investigate any questions we have about books and reading. In this collection of lively and provocative pieces he talks about what readers want from books and how to look at the literature we encounter in a new light.
These pieces were originally published as columns in the New York Review of Books.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this lively collection of 37 essays, novelist (Painting Death) and translator Parks, who is also one of the most eloquent and provocative critics, explores a range of topics in contemporary literature and publishing in essays with titles such as "Do We Need Stories?," "The Dull New Global Novel," "Does Money Make Us Better Writers?," "Why Readers Disagree," and "Translating in the Dark." Parks ponders the ways that translating a text challenges both readers and translators, observing that the act of moving a text from one language to another allows for better understanding of it. Elsewhere, he points out that creative writing programs seldom serve the function of teaching students how to write, instead advancing their careers by introducing them to established writers so they can make valuable professional connections. In a brilliant take on copyright, he notes that the concept is not "essentially driven by notions of justice or theories of ownership, but by a certain culture's attachment to a certain literary form." As the character of the printed word and the nature of reading continue to change, Parks's essays probe the positive and negative effects of these changes for our reading lives.