So many books, so little time : a year of passionate reading / Sara Nelson.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780399150838
- ISBN: 0399150838
- Physical Description: 242 p. ; 22 cm.
- Publisher: New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons, c2003.
Search for related items by subject
- Subject:
- Nelson, Sara, 1956- > Books and reading.
Books and reading > United States.
Available copies
- 1 of 2 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
- 0 of 1 copy available at Radium Hot Springs Public Library.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 2 total copies.
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Holdable? | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Radium Hot Springs Public Library | FIC NEL (Text) | 35130000110597 | Adult Fiction | Not holdable | Missing | - |
- BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2003 October
Caught between the covers: three writers celebrate reading"I can not live without books," Thomas Jefferson once wrote. Avid readers Sara Nelson, Nancy Pearl and Michael Dirda happily share the celebrated statesman's sentiment. From tales of childhood to thoughts on Tolstoy and Twain, a trio of new books by these literature lovers reflects the perks and quirks of their page-turning obsession. Recreation for some, therapy for others, books can enrapture, enrage, envelop and amazeâas these talented authors demonstrate.
"Books get to me personally," says New York Observer publishing columnist and self-proclaimed readaholic Sara Nelson. "When things go right, I read. When things go wrong, I read more." In her new book, So Many Books, So Little Time: A Year of Passionate Reading, Nelson takes the reader along for a year's worth of literature and life, offering funny, wise commentary on the ways in which the two intersect.
Nelson, who had originally intended to select 52 books for 52 weeks of reading, says her plan fell apart almost immediately. "In reading, as in life, even if you know what you're doing, you really kind of don't," she says. In week one, she set out to read Ted Heller's Funnymen, a book about stand-up comics, while staying in a Vermont home once owned by Alexander Solzhenitsyn. But Heller's gags didn't play well in the snowy, somber setting, says Nelson. From that point forward, she says, books seemed to choose her as much as she chose them.
So Many Books, So Little Time is jam-packed with memorable moments, including the unlikely writing lessons gleaned from culinary bad boy and Kitchen Confidential author Anthony Bourdain. Perhaps most memorable of all are Nelson's musings on a reader's right to stop reading a book he or she doesn't like: "It's the literary equivalent of a bar mitzvah or a communion," says the author. "The moment at which you look at yourself and announce: 'Today I am an adult. I can make my own decisions.'" For the record: Nelson now allows herself to toss disappointing tomes at page 20âor 200.
For many, reading is escapism. For writer and Seattle librarian Nancy Pearl, books were nothing short of salvation. Raised in a lower-middle class neighborhood in Detroit, Pearl says her family defined dysfunction long before the label came to be. "All I knew then was that I was deeply and fatally unhappy," says Pearl, author of Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment and Reason (Sasquatch, $16.95, 304 pages, ISBN 1570613818). During childhood and early adolescence, Pearl sought refuge at the Parkman Branch Library, where friendly librarians introduced her to books resonating with realities far brighter than her own. "It is not too much an exaggerationâif it's one at allâto say that reading saved my life," she says.
Providing recommendationsâand revelationsâfor more than 100 categories of books, from "Road Novels" and "Russian Heavies" to "Fabulous First Lines" and "Food for Thought," Pearl's approach is direct. The author of several professional books for librarians, including Now Read This, she highlights some of her favorite scribes in the category "Too Good to Miss," offering an eclectic assortment of authors, including Robert Heinlein and Jonathan Lethem. With its short, snappy chapters, Book Lust is a must for any serious reader's bedside table, a literary nightcap sure to prompt sweet dreams.
"All that kid wants to do is stick his nose in a book," lamented steelworker Eugene Dirda about his son Michael, a shy, bespectacled boy who preferred the pages of Thoreau to dating or sports. From humble beginnings in the Ohio rust belt town of Lorain to a top post at one of the nation's most prestigious newspapers, Dirda's world has always percolated with words. Both witty and wistful, An Open Book: Coming of Age in the Heartland (Norton, $24.95, 320 pages, ISBN 0393057569) pays homage to a bookish youth spent in small-town America. Woven throughout the text are references to books and authors who inspired, intrigued and rankled Dirda, who is now Senior Editor for The Washington Post Book World.
Dirda gives a grateful nod to the educators and friends who influenced him in his early adult years. The Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist also makes peace with the man he considered impossible to please: "I forgave my father everything: He could be overbearing and worse, but his soul-deadening labor gave me the time to read and to know that my life would be privileged compared to his."
Books, it seems, can also offer redemption.
Allison Block writes from La Jolla, California. Copyright 2003 BookPage Reviews
- Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2003 June #1
The publishing columnist for the New York Observer reflects on a year-long reading plan that went deliciously off the track. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information. - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews September #2
This book will inspire and humor those who can't go anywhere without something to read. A reviewer and reporter who focuses on the book industry, Nelson came up with the idea of reading one book per week for a year and recording her reactions. The plan was a good one, but it did not pan out as expected. The result is a marvelous record of how books choose us more than we choose them and how they then proceed to have a wonderful impact on our lives. Nelson's reading covered a broad variety of subjects and authors, from Anne Lamott's Bird by Bird ("funny and wise") when she's suffering from reader's block, to E.B. White's Charlotte's Web when she's trying to get her third-grade son interested in reading, to Catherine Millet's The Sexual Life of Catherine M. when she's wondering whether one should read a favorite sex scene aloud to another person ("that's personal"). Throughout, Nelson's observations remind us of how books can transport us to different worlds and end up changing our own. At the back of the book, she includes lists of what she intended to read, what she ended up reading, and what her must-read stack looks like now. It is a fitting conclusion to a work that will make readers run to the shelf to discover which book beckons next. Recommended for public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 6/1/03.]-Ron Ratliff, Kansas State Univ. Lib., Manhattan Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Review 2003 July #2
"I have a New Year's plan," Nelson writes in the prologue to this charming diary of an unapologetic "readaholic." Her goal: to read a book a week for a year and try "to get down on paper what I've been doing for years in my mind: matching up the reading experience with the personal one and watching where they intersect-or don't." Armed with a list of books, the author, a Glamour senior contributing editor, the New York Observer's publishing columnist and a veteran book reviewer, begins her 52-week odyssey. She doesn't necessarily stick to her list, which includes classics ("the homework I didn't do in college"), books everyone's talking about (like David McCullough's John Adams) and titles as diverse as Call It Sleep, by Henry Roth, and Irvine Welsh's Trainspotting. But she succeeds in sharing her infectious enthusiasm for literature in general, the act of reading and individual books and authors. Along the way, Nelson unearths treasures. She becomes enamored of David Mura's Turning Japanese, a memoir that helps her understand her Japanese-American husband better, and looks to Henry Dunow's The Way Home, about coaching baseball, while trying to help her second-grade son improve his athletic skills. Most readers will probably come away from this love letter to books eager to pursue some of Nelson's favorites-Nora Ephron's Heartburn, perhaps, or Emma Donoghue's Slammerkin-which is what makes Nelson's reflections inspiring and worthwhile. Agent, Mark Reiter. (Oct. 13) Forecast: Nelson's media connections will undoubtedly yield lots of coverage in women's magazines and regional New York publications. National magazine ads, a radio satellite tour, national publicity and online promos with reading groups will help, too. Although the book could, ostensibly, appeal to both men and women, the precious jacket art-of a cartoon woman reading amid a pile of books-might deter male readers. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.