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Edwin Schlossberg : Interactive Intelligence/ How Reading Changed My Life (Library of Contemporary Thought, Interactive Intelligence)
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Author: Edwin Schlossberg
Title: Interactive Intelligence/ How Reading Changed My Life (Library of Contemporary Thought, Interactive Intelligence)
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Published in: English
Binding: Audio Cassette
Pages:
Date: 1998-12
ISBN: 0787118109
Publisher: Dove Entertainment Inc
Weight: 0.2 pounds
Size: 4.3 x 7.0 x 0.6 inches
Edition: Unabridged
Amazon prices:
$8.36used
$19.45new
Wishlists:
1Laura W (USA: NJ).
Description: Product Description
Part of the exciting "The Library of Contemporary Thought" series, which tackles today's most provocative, fascinating, and relevant issues. Giving top opinion makers a forum to explore topics that matter to them and their listeners, the aim of these works is to say things that need saying.


Amazon.com Review
A recurring theme throughout Anna Quindlen's How Reading Changed My Life is the comforting premise that readers are never alone. "There was waking, and there was sleeping. And then there were books," she writes, "a kind of parallel universe in which anything might happen and frequently did, a universe in which I might be a newcomer but never really a stranger. My real, true world." Later, she quotes editor Hazel Rochman: "Reading makes immigrants of us all. It takes us away from home, but, most important, it finds homes for us everywhere." Indeed, Quindlen's essays are full of the names of "friends," real or fictional--Anne of Green Gables and Heidi; Anthony Trollope and Jane Austen, to name just a few--who have comforted, inspired, educated, and delighted her throughout her life. In four short essays Quindlen shares her thoughts on the act of reading itself ("It is like the rubbing of two sticks together to make a fire, the act of reading, an improbable pedestrian task that leads to heat and light"); analyzes the difference between how men and women read ("there are very few books in which male characters, much less boys, are portrayed as devoted readers"); and cheerfully defends middlebrow literature:

Most of those so-called middlebrow readers would have readily admitted that the Iliad set a standard that could not be matched by What Makes Sammy Run? or Exodus. But any reader with common sense would also understand intuitively, immediately, that such comparisons are false, that the uses of reading are vast and variegated and that some of them are not addressed by Homer.
The Canon, censorship, and the future of publishing, not to mention that of reading itself, are all subjects Quindlen addresses with intelligence and optimism in a book that may not change your life, but will no doubt remind you of other books that did. --Alix Wilber
URL: http://bookmooch.com/0787118109
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