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Living, Thinking, Looking [Unabridged] [Hardcover]

Siri Hustvedt
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
RRP: £18.99
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Book Description

7 Jun 2012
From the internationally bestselling author of What I Loved and The Summer Without Men, a dazzling collection of essays written with Siri Hustvedt's customary intelligence, wit and ability to convey complex ideas in a clear and lively way.

Divided into three sections - Living, which draws on Siri's own life; Thinking, on memory, emotion and the imagination; and Looking, on art and artists - the essays range across the humanities and science as Siri explores how we see, remember, feel and interact with others, what it means to sleep, dream and speak, and what we mean by 'self'. The combination offers a profound and fascinating insight into ourselves as thinking, feeling beings.

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Living, Thinking, Looking + The Shaking Woman or A History of My Nerves + The Summer without Men
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Sceptre; Unabridged edition (7 Jun 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1444732633
  • ISBN-13: 978-1444732634
  • Product Dimensions: 14.2 x 3.5 x 22.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 150,655 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

'Her erudition, the sharp clarity of her thinking, the variety of her sources and the supple ways in which she weaves them into personal narrative, coupled with her fearlessness in the face of those aspects of the human condition which are of necessity ambiguous, infuse her work with a rare kind of quiet intellectual confidence...I'll be returning to these essays.' (Melanie McGrath, Sunday Telegraph 20120610)

'richly intelligent insights on every page' (George Pendle, Financial Times 20120602)

'Siri Hustvedt is best known as a novelist and her novels have received a deserved acclaim. But to my mind, she is even more to be admired as an essayist...there is something refreshingly straightforward about her style. It has the confidence born of complex but well digested thoughts and thus lacks the tendency to obfuscate that is the hallmark of the inferior thinker's style.' (Salley Vikcers, Observer 20120603)

'...she is an inspiring guide to territory where both the humanities and the sciences can throw light on the ways in which we construct meaning in our lives.' (Nick Rennison, Sunday Times, Culture 20120617)

'Hustvedt addresses a broad public without dumbing down her material... At once stimulating and warm-hearted, with sentences of drop-dead beauty and acuity on nearly every page.' (Kirkus 20120617)

'Hustvedt's deep interest in art, psychology, and neuroscience shape her brilliantly insightful novels as well as her virtuoso essays...Mystery, fact, intelligence, and enchantment flourish here.' (Booklist 20120617)

'exquisitely eloquent...You'll be by turns inspired, provoked, educated and enchanted. Her writing is scientifically precise and poetically elegant, and this intense compilation merits careful attention. It's a book you can return to time and time again.' (Beatrice Hodgkin, Easy Living 20120617)

'These essays offer thoughts on locating morality in the brain, the origins of desire and who we are when we sleep...I suggest you take this book to your favourite corner, turn off the phone and allow yourself to be reminded of the pure pleasure of using your mind.' (Clare Longrigg, Psychologies 20120617)

'Like a good poem, "Living, Thinking, Looking" is by turns concrete and abstract, illuminating hidden corners of experience and feeling.' (New York Times 20120617)

About the Author

Siri Hustvedt`s first novel, THE BLINDFOLD, was published by Sceptre in 1993 and her second, THE ENCHANTMENT OF LILY DAHL, followed in 1997. Both were highly acclaimed and translated around the world, while part of THE BLINDFOLD was made into a film (Of Women and Magic, directed by Claude Miller). Her third novel, WHAT I LOVED, was published in 2003 to even greater acclaim and has been an international success; her next novel, THE SORROWS OF AN AMERICAN, followed in 2008. Her work has been published in The Paris Review, Fiction, and The Best American Short Stories, and she is also the author of READING TO YOU, a poetry collection, and three collections of essays, YONDER, MYSTERIES OF THE RECTANGLE: Essays on Painting, and A PLEA FOR EROS, and a non-fiction work, THE SHAKING WOMAN: A HISTORY OF MY NERVES. Her most recent novel is THE SUMMER WITHOUT MEN. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband, Paul Auster.

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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Thought-provoking collection of essays 8 July 2012
Format:Hardcover
Siri Hustvedt is best known for novels such as `What I Loved', `The Sorrows of the American' and `The Enchantment of Lily Dahl' which have all received deserved critical acclaim. But I know her best for her essays and non-fiction works such as `A Plea for Eros' and `The Shaking Woman (or A History of My Nerves)'. Both of these latter works still resonate with me. For example, it was in `A Plea for Eros' that Hustvedt commented on the narcissistic aspects of love. That is, each of us desires another (or `an Other') who reflects ourselves back to us (our beliefs, desires, morals etc.). This idea has stuck with me as I think, in general, it is very true. It seems to me that when a couple meet for the first time and say they `just clicked' this `clicking' often translates as a `meeting of minds'. Two minds which were previously separate like small pieces within a larger jigsaw puzzle, click into place. They fit together and reflect one another.

Hustvedt's latest book, `Living, Thinking, Looking' sees her returning to the essay format - which I think is her métier. It is a collection of 32 essays divided into the three subject areas of the book's title: `living' consists of pieces drawn from Hustvedt's own life; `thinking' is a selection of writings on memory and the self; and `looking' mainly focuses on artworks and artists. What I love about Hustvedt's books is her writing style: it is so clear and unambiguous - even when she is expounding on subjects as complex as post-structuralist theory, neuroscience, and Freudian psychology. One of the blurbs on the back of `Living, Thinking, Looking' comments that she `has an enviable ability to digest and reframe her discoveries into clear, accessible prose'. And in a recent review of Hustvedt's latest book, the author Sally Vickers concurs - she believes Hustvedt `has the confidence born of complex but well digested thoughts and thus lacks the tendency to obfuscate that is the hallmark of the inferior thinker's style'. I couldn't agree more. One of Hustvedt's essays in this collection (`Excursions to the Islands of the Happy Few') attacks ivory-towered intellectuals who write rarified texts that rely on words only known to the `happy few'. Writing for the `happy few' is not in Hustvedt's remit, and it's for this reason I think her books should be read more widely. She writes about, for, and to all of us.

There are several themes running through `Living, Thinking' Looking' and these include: i) the mutability and plasticity of memory; ii) the interlinking of memory and imagination; iii) the divided self; and iv) the creative interaction between artist and viewer.

As ever, Hustvedt's essays give plenty of food for thought - which is the sign of a great writer. However, the problem with a collection of essays like this one which have been written over a period of 5-6 years is that the same ideas keep popping up throughout the book. It can therefore get a little repetitive. Yet despite this, Hustvedt's book is definitely worth reading. It has made me realise, for example, that having the feeling of not belonging to a country isn't so odd afterall. It has also made me understand that memory is not something that is fixed and immutable - and that both it and the imagination are one and the same thing. And, for me, any book which makes you understand yourself better and which improves your knowledge of the world around you is a work to be treasured.
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars  1 review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Recommended Reading 29 Oct 2012
By Edgar E. Soberon - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I have enjoyed reading these essays probably as much as "Mysteries of the Rectangle",which I highly recommend to anyone in the arts.
Hustvedt has mastered the art of the essay form, bringing together ideas and viewpoints from disparate disciplines.
The essay on painter Giorgio Morandi, puts into words things one often is incapable of uttering before
the impenetrable silence of a Morandi Still Life. Recommended reading.
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