![]() ![]() ![]() What an obnoxious family! What a bunch of captious, carping, pettifogging little busybodies!"" Well, yes, but Fadiman's writing, particularly in her briefer essays, is lively and sparkling with earthy little surprises: William Kunstler enjoyed writing (bad) sonnets, John Hersey plagiarized from Fadiman's mother. At least the author is self-aware: ""I know what you may be thinking. College Bowl, almost always beating the TV contestants they compete to see who can find the most typos on restaurant menus and adore obscure words such as ""goetic"" (pertaining to witchcraft). The aggressive verbal games waged in Fadiman's (as in Clifton) family are similarly trying: They watched G.E. The minutiae of the shelving arrangements at the Fadiman household brings the reader to agree with the author's husband, who ""seriously contemplated divorce"" when she begged him to keep Shakespeare's plays in chronological order. Unfortunately, some of these fascinating ideas grow fussy. Gathered from the ""Common Reader"" column Fadiman wrote for Civilization magazine, these essays are all inspired by interesting ideas-how spouses merge their large libraries, the peculiar pleasures of reading mail-order catalogues, the joys of reading aloud, how people inscribe their books and why. The author of last year's NBCC-winning The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, has collected 18 essays about her relationships with books, reading, writing and words. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |