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The joys of reading books about books

Reading books about books will bring back to us what it’s like to be lost in a book. Two new books by Michiko Kakutani and Cathy Rentzenbrink are also not an exception.

October 24, 2020 / 09:20 IST
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There’s a special satisfaction in reading books about books. These come in many varieties. There are collected essays by writers and critics, volumes about private and public libraries, histories of specific books, and meditations on how books have helped people get through difficult times. It’s a genre by itself.

Alberto Manguel, former director of the National Library of Argentina, has made this something of a specialty. His histories of reading, reading diaries, and accounts of unpacking his library are rich and rewarding. Others such as novelist and translator Tim Parks periodically publish collected essays with reflections on books and authors.

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Many make individuality a virtue. Novelist Anna Quindlen’s How Reading Changed My Life, about her profound relationship with books over the years, includes lists such as ‘10 books I would save in a fire’, and ‘10 books that will help a teenager feel more human’. More recently, there was My Life with Bob by Pamela Paul, editor of the New York Times Book Review. The Bob in question is her Book of Books: a journal in which she’s made notes on every book she’s ever read.

Two new books continue this tradition in different ways. The first, by Michiko Kakutani, formerly feared and revered book reviewer for The New York Times; and the second, by novelist and memoirist Cathy Rentzenbrink.