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One for the Books (2012)

von Joe Queenan

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4553154,529 (3.66)26
One of America's leading humorists and author of the bestseller "Closing Time" examines his own obsession with books.
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I love books about books and am always intrigued by real readers' passions. So I enjoyed this very much. Too long and with some schticks I found tiresome, but these were overcome. Now to go make those booklists. . . ( )
  fmclellan | Jan 23, 2024 |
occasionally, you'll catch queenan trying way too hard to be cute while snarking, but otherwise, this book is warm and fun. ( )
  alison-rose | May 22, 2023 |
Joe Queenan has idiosyncratic reading habits, like seeking out all the Inspector Maigret mysteries in the original French. That doesn't quite make him eriuditer than the rest of us, only just enough to likely have an emphatic opinion about whether eriuditer is really a word. Here he works himself into an entertaining lather defending his book eccentricities. He's not much for libraries, or bookstores, or recommendations from friends, all of which I value greatly (so by the way, thank you for letting Goodreads ransack your address book). Ornery as he gets, Queenan starts from the same place as many readers: We'll have time to read only so many books in our lifetime, so why not indulge a few preferences? These are originally magazine essays and the material overlaps, so it's OK to skim. Queenan of course would disagree, but he's a bit of a masochist.
  rynk | Jul 11, 2021 |
Queenan is refreshingly opinionated from a reader who's "reading life" cannot be separated from his actual life.

"For me, books have always been a safety valve, and in some cases-- a deux ex machina. Books are a way of saying: This room seems to have more than its fair share of bozos in it. Edith Wharton may be dead, but she's still better company than those palookas."

"All my comments refer to the physical act of reading. I do not listen to audiobooks, for the same reason that I do not listen to baked ziti; it lacks the personal touch."

"Picasso produced hundreds of great paintings; Ralph Ellison wrote one great novel. Art is hard, but literature is murder."

"The past almost always seems cozier that the present, because you can no longer remember the fears and uncertainties that clouded your future at the time. And whatever the case, you were forty years younger. The unpleasant episodes in those long-vanished decades get edited out of our memories..."

"Decades go by without anyone breathing a word regarding Italo Svevo, Italo Calvino, or anybody else I admire named Italo. Among my favorite writers are Marcel Ayme, Ivan Doig, J.G. Farrell, George Bernanos, Thomas Berger, Junichiro Tanizaki, Robert Coover, and Jean Giono. I have never once been engaged in conversation about these writers. Perhaps I travel the wrong crowds."

"All technology is corporate. Certain things are perfect the way they are and need no improvement. The sky, the Pacific Ocean, procreation, and the Goldberg Variations all fit this bill, and so do books. Books are sublime, but books are also visceral. They are physically appealing, emotionally evocative objects that constitute a perfect delivery system."

(on ebooks and ereaders...)
"... they are useless for people who are engaged in an intense, lifelong love affair with books. Books that we can touch; books that we can smell; books that we can depend on."

"Putting James Patterson next to Marcel Proust is like displaying Babe Ruth's uniform alongside Three Finger Brown's. It's as if the library expects some knucklehead, discovering that Along Came a Spider is currently out on loan, to declare, "Oh, well, I guess I'll just borrow In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flowers instead."

"The case can be made that it is better to read drivel than to read nothing, on the theory that people will eventually tire of garbage and move on to something more meaty, like trash. I believe that this may sometimes occur with the young, but I doubt that it ever happens with adults. Adults do not suddenly tire of reading Nora Roberts and jump up and exclaim: "Screw this crap; by God, I'm going to give Marcus Aurelius a rip!" People read bad books because bad books serve their needs."

"Bad books are not good books written in a less literary style. Bad books are bad books. They have bad prose, bad ideas, bad characters, and bad themes. Bad books are written by people who would never even think of writing a good book. What would be the point? You'd only end up like Gunter Grass or Nadine Gordimer or Doris Lessing, Nobel Prize winners whose masterpieces were now in the process of getting purged from the stacks of the local library."

"I told the assembled librarians that while Attila the Hun would always be at the gates of Rome, I didn't see why it was necessary to invite him in as a keynote speaker. By discarding tradition, librarians were digging their own graves. In the new command model designed for libraries, at least as delineated by this techno-twit, librarians would have no reason to exist."

"Middlemarch is the last book I will ever finish. I'm not going down without a fight. I have started it six times; I am now 312 pages into it; but it is much like the mandolin or snooker or tantric sex; something I would dearly love to master without ever believing for one second that I would actually enjoy the experience."

"...this is what happens as one approaches old age and its concomitant, death. Life becomes a zero-sum affair, where every second spent reading mediocre books is time that could be spent reading great ones."

"The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is badly written and is for all intents and purposes voyeuristic porn. The nonsense about Lisbeth Salander as a feminist role model is twaddle; she's a sociopath with piercings."

"...crummy books only lead to more crummy books. There is a direct line from Slaughterhouse-Five to War and Peace, from the Red Pony to The Red and the Black, Sister Carrie might pave the way for Anna Karenina, but Carrie would only pave the way for Cujo."

"Each reading experience is personal. You have this moment now. It can only exist in the present. So it's stupid to think that you can re-create if for someone else."

"When I asked my daughter if reading was escapism, she answered: "No, reading is the opposite of escapism. It is introversion so extreme that you come out the other side of yourself."

"The presence of books in my hands, my home, my pockets, my life will never cease to be essential to my happiness. I will never own an e-reader. I have no use for them. A dimly remembered girlfriend's handwriting will never take me by surprise in a Nook. A faded ticket to the Eiffel Tower will never out of a Kindle. I am a Luddite, and proud of it." ( )
  runningbeardbooks | Sep 29, 2020 |
Enjoyed this one, even though Borders wasn't his favorite bookstore. The author def. has his views. Interesting tie to France.. And the book did make me laugh out loud often. ( )
  ShannonRose4 | Sep 15, 2020 |
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To Skip McGovern, Lover of Books
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The average American reads four books a year, and the average American finds this more than sufficient.
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One of America's leading humorists and author of the bestseller "Closing Time" examines his own obsession with books.

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