Why Read? Selected Writings 2001–2021
Will Self. Grove, $26 (336p) ISBN 978-0-80216-024-9
Two decades of essays and lectures on literature come together in this idiosyncratic volume from Self (Will). In answering the question posed by the title essay, which was published on the website Literary Hub in 2021, he writes “read because short of meeting and communing with them... reading about diverse modes of being and consciousness is the best way we have of entering into them and abiding.” Several pieces focus on the novel in the digital age: in “A Care Home for Novels,” a 2014 lecture Self gave at Trinity College, Oxford, he muses that novels will continue to be read, though they’ll be “an art form on a par with easel painting or classical music,” and in “The Printed Word in Peril,” published in Harper’s in 2018, he admits his determination “not to rage against the dying of literature’s light... but merely to examine the great technological discontinuity of our era.” “The Last Typewriter Engineer,” meanwhile, from the London Review of Books in 2014, is an ode to the man who services Self’s typewriters, and to the machines themselves (“My stick-fingers produced satisfying percussive paradiddles, in between which came blissful fermatas”). Taken together, the candid musings are a fine mix of practicality and nostalgia. Self’s fans will relish having these wide-ranging reflections in one place. (Jan.)
Details
Reviewed on: 10/03/2022
Genre: Nonfiction
MP3 CD - 979-8-212-41192-9
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