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Hardcover For the Love of Books Book

ISBN: 0399144668

ISBN13: 9780399144660

For the Love of Books

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

For this ultimate book lover's guide, more than one hundred distinguished writers share their personal thoughts in response to the question: what books have left the greatest impression on you and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Books that were/are important to the authors that we read.

I received this book as a gift; generally this method of acquisition all but ensures I will never read the work. In this particular case that generality was broken, and I was the beneficiary.Mr. Ronald B. Shwartz has collected the thoughts of 115 writers and received an answer to the request, "Identify those 3-6 books that have in some way influenced or affected you most deeply...". The entertainment begins prior to the first author's selection as Mr. Shwartz shares some responses to the idea of the question itself. Anna Quindlen "This is a mean thing to ask someone to do."Kurt Vonnegut "Anyone asking a writer a question like yours should own a thumbscrew and a rack."James McBride "If the literary world, or if anyone else in the world for that matter, feels I'm smart enough to offer my two cents about anything, we're all in deep doo-doo, but what the heck, count me in..."I would imagine the collected responses would make for an excellent read of their own. Fortunately the book leaps much further and deeper, it almost pries into the very personal thoughts of these writers who all are associated with excellence. Their work ranges from one to the other end of whatever writing genre could be listed, and their answers will generally surprise you. As these people are some of the literary legends of the 20th and now the 21st Century I expected answers both lofty and impenetrable to the average reader. I could not have been more in error. Yes there are references to poetical works that I could not find in 10 years with the same number of computers. But happily the book is very readable. And lest you think it takes itself too seriously, I offer Christopher Buckley and his opening to his answer,"Well, if you're looking for recondite works in, say, lesbian studies from the early seventeenth century, you're "___" out of luck with me." I imagined Buckley The Elder wincing with that bit of earthiness from his Son.The books that made some wish to write or at least were influential in their work will surely fascinate. It is the only book of its kind I have read, but unless I come across another, this sets the bar.

buy one for yourself, and 10 for your friends-extraordinary!

Remarkable front to back. I have loved books all my life, lectured and written about them throughout a long career, and reflected at length on the whole question of what the point of reading is anyway, and why anyone-on whatever path in life-would bother. I don't profress to be a reigning authority on books or on life; but as the end of my own life approaches, perhaps I'm qualified to shout from the rafters that those who think life too short or too full of more practical pursuits or interesting diversions-or think reading is a luxury too rich for their blood (or not rich enough)-have missed the point. No book I have ever read is more illustrative than For The Love of Books: 115 Celebrated Writers on the Books They Love Most. I'm grateful to Mr. Shwartz for having the temerity to conceive of this wonderfully engaging and seductive book and the enormous dedication to see it through. Yet for all the discipline, tact, and resourcefulness it obviously required, I suspect something even more precious at work here. I doubt that many of the world-class writers who agreed to take part would have given Shwartz the time of day had they not sensed in him, as I do, an exquisite literary intelligence of his own. Shwartz has given me a lasting gift and I cannot imagine a book more worthy of giving others and not just book lovers-a perfect gift even and maybe especially for those who think good books are mostly for the "bookish." A simply extraordinary achievement.

Great book for casual browsing

If you're a booklover with eclectic tastes, who likes to roam the aisles of libraries and bookstores, this is a book you'll want to keep and refer back to again and again. It is greatly rewarding not only for the books that are mentioned, but for what they reveal about the writers who were influenced by them. While many of the old standards --- Melville, Shakespeare, Hemingway, Faulkner, Proust, Joyce --- are given their due by the writers, there are surprises at every turn. For example, a book that I had never heard of --- "Epitaph of a Small Winner," by Machado de Assis, was singled out by no fewer than three of the writers (Pete Hamill, John Barth, and Thomas McGuane.) Indeed, just sifting through the bibliographical index to see which authors had multiple references (e.g. Melville had eight)was most instructive. The essays are, for the most part, thoughtful and stimulating. This is a great book for random browsing...I came away from it stimulated and entertained, but also guilty and frustrated, knowing I'll never have time to read but a tiny fraction of the books that have so inspired others.

Even more depth than meets the eye

This book is so good, on so many levels, that it's hard to know where to begin to praise it. For those whose idols are writers, there are stellar names -- Mailer, Updike, Gordimer -- who have contributed original pieces to this unique anthology. Furthermore, each essay is intensely personal, setting forth the writer's own best-loved books and authors. You can play amateur sleuth and try to deduce how the writer's own output was shaped by what s/he cherishes, or assemble a reading list of often little-known books which have deeply influenced someone who has deeply influenced you. And the essays themselves are literature. You can consider yourself well-read, I think, and never have heard of say, Guy Davenport, described as an award-winning translator, poet, and modernist fiction writer in the handy biographical notes. Ordinarily, I wouldn't be drawn to his subject matter, but his essay is so down-to-earth and engaging, I want to reach both his books and those of others whom he admires. This book has already lead me to previously unfamiliar writers, including Carol Shields, John Casey, and Elizabeth McCracken, which automatically amortizes the purchase price over the rest of my lifetime and means I could die tomorrow and still have gotten my money's worth. My one regret is that the introduction by editor Ronald B. Shwartz, who clearly spent two years of his life's blood assembling this collection, only hints at what an extraordinary experience it must start with one good idea and build it into this impressive monument to bibliphilism. I hope the full story of this accomplishment will become his next book.

A must for anyone who loves writers and writing

Ever wonder what books might have influenced Oliver Stone in his formative years? Would you be surprised to know that "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "Gone With The Wind" are among them? If your home had only six books in it, would one of them be "The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini"? Bruce Jay Friedman grew up in that home. This entertaining, important, and eminently readable book has surprises, delights, insights, and good prose on every page. And little wonder, when the list of contributors includes many of the titans of modern literature(Mailer,Lessing, Merwin, Updike, Styron...). The graceful Introduction and biographical comments of Ronald B. Shwartz perfectly complement the at-times-amusing, at-times-profound tone of his contributors. I simply cannot put this book down; my only wish is that it could be even longer.
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