The Times
"Brilliant stuff"
New York Times
"A survivor's guide to life in the chattering classes...evidently much in need"
Observer, Toby Lichtig
"Bayard has produced a witty and provocative monograph with a serious point."
Sunday Times, Lynne Truss
"This is a rich, meaty and immensely enjoyable essay ... It is about where legitimate critical opinions really come from"
The Times, John Sutherland
"Bayard discourses on "non-reading" with wit [and] makes some weighty points"
Big Issue Scotland
'Funny and perceptive'
THES, Susan Bassnet
`An entertaining and provocative read'
Product Description
In this disarmingly mischievous and provocative book, already a runaway bestseller in France, Pierre Bayard contends that in this age of infinite publication, the truly cultivated person is not the one who has read a book, but the one who understands the book's place in our culture. Drawing on examples from works by Graham Greene, Umberto Eco, Oscar Wilde, Montaigne (who couldn't remember books he himself had written), and many others, he examines the many kinds of 'non-reading' (forgotten books, unknown books, books discussed by others, books we've skimmed briefly) and the many potentially nightmarish situations in which we are called upon to discuss our reading with others (with our loved ones, with the book's author, etc.).At heart, this is a book that will challenge everyone who's ever felt guilty about missing some of the Great Books to consider what reading means, how we absorb books as part of ourselves, and how and why we spend so much time talking about what we have, or haven't, read.
About the Author
Pierre Bayard is a professor of French literature at the University of Paris VIII and a psychoanalyst. He is the author of Who Killed Roger Ackroyd? and many other books.