Alberto Manguel is a writer, a translator, and an editor of international reputation; his many books include The Dictionary of Imaginary Places (with Gianni Guadalupi), the award-winning novel News From a Foreign Country Came, and the short story anthologies Black Water, The Gates of Paradise, and (with Craig Stephenson) In Another Part of the Forest. Born in Buenos Aires, Manguel has traveled extensively and is now a Canadian citizen.
Praise for A History of Reading:
“Ingenious…a veritable museum of literacy. One feels envious of his
passion…through it, his gift becomes our own.”—The New York Times
Book Review
“Manguel has taken on the daunting subject of our own passion
for books and succeeded in turning it into a passionate book of his
own.”—Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
“No one who follows Manguel’s narrative to its conclusion need ever
again feel guilty about putting off errands, chores, the bills, the
kids, sleep—whatever—and curling up with a good, or even a great,
book.”—Newsweek
“Manguel is a generous companion…he remains, in the proper sense of
the word, an ‘amateur,’ a lover rather than a specialist.”—George
Steiner, the New Yorker
“Richly detailed and utterly fascinating…what lifts A History of
Reading above mere charm and idiosyncrasy is Manguel’s reader’s
soul. A few hours passed with [his] book will remind anyone who
needs reminding that an astonishing bond exists between word and
world.”—Sven Birkerts, Boston Magazine
“A highly entertaining overview that leaves us with both a new
appreciation of our own bibliomania and a deeper understanding of
the role that the written word has played throughout history.”—The
New York Times
“Manguel’s digressions are delightful, his anecdotes appealing, and
his stories scintillating. What might have been no more than one
dammed thing after another turns out to be, at the handsof this
splendid raconteur, one divine thing after another….It is all
utterly beguiling.”—The Boston Sunday Globe
“Impressionistic, engrossing.”—Time
“An entertaining, provocative, and informative book.”—The
Washington Post
“Tickles, surprises, and amuses.”—The Philadelphia Inquirer
“Impressive, engaging.”—The Washington Times
“Erudite and original.”—The Miami Herald
“Enormously entertaining.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“A wonderful merger of scholarship and personal essay….Manguel
writes so beautifully and felicitously that he infects us with
enthusiasm again and again.”—Philip Lopate
“Manguel’s urbane, unpretentious tone recalls that of a friend
eager to share his knowledge and enthusiasm. His book, digressive,
witty, surprising, is a pleasure.”—Kirkus
“Highly enjoyable….I finished the book with a sense of gratitude to
have shared this journey through time in the company of a mind so
lively, knowledgeable, and sympathetic.”—P. D. James
“An eclectic and deeply felt history of reading. It is a history
illuminated by an acute sensibility….An unfailingly engaging
work.”—School Library Journal
“Unique, enlightening, and as captivating as a celebration of
reading should be.”—Booklist
“Interesting, intriguing, and entertaining.”—Library Journal
“Erudition and memoir are beautifully wed in this stimulating and
provocative book.”—Virginia Quarterly Review
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