The "Reading Books About Reading Books" Tag

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  • Опубліковано 18 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 29

  • @jonathanbrewer7072
    @jonathanbrewer7072 2 дні тому +7

    Books and long walks are my elixir to life's woes and challenges.

  • @marnasorensen988
    @marnasorensen988 День тому +3

    Forever thankful to my parents, who had a varied book collection, encouraged frequent trips to the library, and didn't own a television.

  • @jonathanbrewer7072
    @jonathanbrewer7072 День тому +4

    A great book is a friend who never lets you down - Mark Twain.

  • @henryhrsn
    @henryhrsn День тому +4

    Education of a Wandering Man by Louis L'Amour is a must-read if you enjoy stories about the love of books and reading in general. L'Amour writes about his life as a hobo, traveling around and taking whatever work he could find, with books as his constant companions. Education of a Wandering Man is absolutely stacked with references to other books. Highly recommended.

    • @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p
      @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p  День тому +2

      I've read L'Amour's book. It was years ago. I had forgotten about it. At the time I was more interested in his westerns and the Sackett books. I wonder now if maybe L'Amour encouraged my love of reading more than I realized. I remember especially his praise of Plutarch. Thanks for the jog to my memory. I might need to do a followup post.

  • @jf8559
    @jf8559 2 дні тому +5

    Great tag and thanks for the discussion about books and reading. One of my very favourite topics to read about! I would also recommend Ex Libris by Anne Fadiman, as well as Rereadings by her. Also Howard’s End is on the Landing by Susan Hill, and from a bookseller’s perspective Lewis Buzbee’s The Yellow Lighted Bookshop, Alberto Manguel’s A History of Reading, and Maureen Corrigan’s Leave Me Alone, I’m Reading.

  • @kl-ge9bg
    @kl-ge9bg День тому +1

    Francis Spufford - The Child That Books Built
    Michael Dirda - An Open Book
    Mark Hodkinson - No One Round Here Reads Tolstoy: Memoirs of a Working-Class Reader
    Joe Queenan - One for the Books
    Nick Hornby - The Polysyllabic Spree (and its sequels)
    Nancy Malone - Walking a Literary Labyrinth
    Arnold Weinstein - A Scream Goes Through the House

  • @jonathanbrewer7072
    @jonathanbrewer7072 2 дні тому +3

    Highly recommend Collins Gem : Classic Books. Provides a valuable and entertaining introduction to the world of great literature.

  • @sofiar611
    @sofiar611 2 дні тому +1

    This is a great list--I'll definitely be reading some of these!

  • @BookChatWithPat8668
    @BookChatWithPat8668 2 дні тому +1

    This is a great idea, Bob. I’ll look forward to doing this soon. I’ve tagged you today also on a tag about our bookish roots. 😊

  • @GordonTyrrall
    @GordonTyrrall День тому +1

    Enjoyed that - having just discovered your channel while at a loose end in the Galapagos😄. I've read the Alberto Manguel books (that you didnt mention,but others did) and found them a bit uninspiring, and he tends to go for the massive classics like Don Quixote,Montaigne and Ulysses. I like to hear a little more down-to-earth personal accounts of reading - which seems more likely in the books you suggest. Yes I nearly veered off when the dreaded word "prayer" came up (I'm English and we don't talk about prayer) but I think your point was interesting and entertaining- God as the author we pass in the street without knowing - lovely notion. 😄

    • @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p
      @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p  День тому

      Thank you for your comments. And, yes, I was a little concerned about losing some viewers with my mention of "prayer" and "God" and all that. I'm glad you caught the wry observation, that we might pass God in the street without knowing it. Metaphorically speaking, of course,

  • @chrismusic1180
    @chrismusic1180 2 дні тому

    I enjoy the essay collections of Michael Dirda ("Browsings" being the latest and a good example). These are collections of light, familiar essays that always give me a reading boost

  • @jonathanbrewer7072
    @jonathanbrewer7072 День тому +1

    I do hope we will look at literary criticism. For my work in progress The Narnia Enigma I use the late Dr David Holbrook's, Fellow of Cambridge University, phenomenological study of CS Lewis. An extraordinary read. Through a study of symbolism and psycho analysis we get an invaluable insight.

    • @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p
      @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p  День тому +1

      I enjoy literary criticism, and was not dismissing it. I was only making the point that, regarding this tag, I was setting the parameters to include only books about the joy of reading books. A separate tag about literary criticism is one I would absolutely support.

    • @jonathanbrewer7072
      @jonathanbrewer7072 День тому +1

      @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p Thank you. Literary criticism can be extraordinary ( eg Freudianism ).
      Dr David Holbrook did a phenomenological one for the two Alice books. Oh my ! Look forward to your own assessment.

  • @bottleimpbooks
    @bottleimpbooks 2 дні тому +1

    I recommend two books by Alberto Manguel, A History of Reading and The Library at Night. Oh, and a classic, Palinurus' (Cyril Connolly's) The Unquiet Grave.

  • @carolnash5617
    @carolnash5617 2 дні тому

    This is an interesting topic, i have not seen any books like these. I am interested in a few you mentioned, and i will look for them. Thank you!

  • @illustratedjournal
    @illustratedjournal День тому +1

    Funny that I just picked up "Why We Read" by Shannon Reed (Read? ha). Another great read is "The Untold Story of Books" by Michael Castleman. Thanks for the suggestions. I'll be reading about reading!

  • @mykleine
    @mykleine День тому +1

    Neverending Story - Michael Ende

  • @TriumphalReads
    @TriumphalReads 2 дні тому

    Lovely idea for a new tag

  • @kevintowle9665
    @kevintowle9665 2 дні тому

    Wow, awesome idea for a book tag, thanks Bob for the tag. I will work on this very soon! Happy Holidays!

  • @tegeuscromis8947
    @tegeuscromis8947 День тому +2

    Swann's Way first and foremost. Then Don Quixote, Madame Bovary, most of Borges... Of much more recent stuff, Lev Grossman's The Magicians is very good on this... Etc etc.

  • @BobJacobs10
    @BobJacobs10 2 дні тому +1

    My tip for this kind of books: Papyrus by Irene Vallejo.

  • @jackforseti224
    @jackforseti224 День тому

    I disagree with you on Harald Bloom. He was very condescending to Stephen King and J.K. Rowling, and very arrogant

    • @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p
      @RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p  День тому

      Understood. Fair enough. Though expressing my admiration for Bloom doesn't mean I agree with everything he said. And he could be full of himself, for sure, but that was part of his unique character. He was remarkably well read and thoughtful, and not especially concerned with other writers' feelings, especially if he found them lacking in the qualities he thought made for a true artist.

    • @jackforseti224
      @jackforseti224 День тому

      @@RobertGReaderofBooks-r3p I've subscribed to your channel, I just dislike Bloom. I guess it does make him a character, but a character I dislike. Do you think he overrates the importance of Shakespeare? He seems to glorify Shakespeare in everything I read by him