A new, compelling collection of essays by Sven Birkerts, "one of
America's most distinguished, eloquent servants of the poetry and
fiction that matter" (Susan Sontag)
Reading, the mind's traffic in signs and signifiers, is the most
dynamic, changeful, and possibly transformational act we can imagine. To
have read a work and have been strongly affected by it--and then to come
back to it after many years--can be a foundation-shaking enterprise.
In Reading Life, virtuoso critic and essayist Sven Birkerts examines
what it means to return to resonant works of fiction--the books one
thinks of "covetously, as private properties," the "personal signposts"
of one's inner life. For Birkerts, these include The Catcher in the
Rye, Humboldt's Gift, To the Lighthouse, and Lolita. In twelve
far-reaching and intimate essays, Birkerts reflects upon his first
readings and what later encounters reveal about time, memory, and the
murmuring transistors of selfhood.