Until last month, I hadn’t written a Book Note in just over two years. I admit that’s a long hiatus, but I was still taken aback at an email that asked, Does that mean you haven’t read a book since 2006? I blog, therefore I am? Courtesy of Pierre Bayard’s How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read, I now have the perfect retort for the next hiatus: That all depends on what you mean by read. According to Bayard, we have many ways of relating to books beyond not reading, including skimming, skipping, forgetting and glancing at covers. As cultivated people know, Bayard tells us, culture is above all a matter of orientation. Being cultivated is a matter of not having read any book in particular, but of being able to find your bearings within books as a system, which requires you to know that they form a system and to be able to locate each element in relation to the others. This book is a delightful antidote in a society that holds reading sacred. It does indeed encourage you to talk, guilt-free, about books you haven’t read, but more than that will make you remember why you love reading in the first place.
Subverting Our Reverence for Books
We live in a culture that holds books sacred. Pierre Bayard puts it into perspective. more →
How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read
By Pierre Bayard
Raincoast Books , pp.208
Buy this book (why?)
Tags
Pierre Bayard, reading skills, situated learning
Until last month, I hadn’t written a Book Note in just over two years. I admit that’s a long hiatus, but I was still taken aback at an email that asked, I blog, therefore I am? Courtesy of Pierre Bayard’s How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read, I now have the perfect retort for the next hiatus: According to Bayard, we have many ways of relating to books beyond not reading, including skimming, skipping, forgetting and glancing at covers. Bayard tells us, This book is a delightful antidote in a society that holds reading sacred. It does indeed encourage you to talk, guilt-free, about books you haven’t read, but more than that will make you remember why you love reading in the first place.