The Year of Reading Dangerously: How Fifty Great Books Saved My Life
By (Author) Andy Miller
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
27th April 2015
23rd April 2015
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
809
Paperback
336
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 24mm
330g
A funny, scrupulously honest account of one mans quest to reverse 20 years of lies and read the books hes always claimed to have read.
'I loved the writing and the characterisation, oh, and the plot yeah, all really pithy. Really great': sound familiar
Andy Miller has been living a lie. But then again, who hasn't How many books have you claimed to have read but never actually finished, or started, or even heard of Books you've really wanted to read, or should have read, but never had the time, or the inclination Tackling the canon single-handedly, Miller decides to rectify his twenty odd years of lies and silence his nagging guilt and become the literate man he's always claimed himself to be.
The Year of Reading Dangerously is an inspired and witty tour of literature from all genres: classic, cult and Dan Brown. A comparative reading of The Da Vinci Code and Moby Dick somehow seems inevitable, the Charles Arrowby cookbook becomes a terrifying possibility and an explanation of the curious unreadability of Catch-22 is attempted. We travel from the mires of inaccessibility, incomprehensibility, commodification and confusion to moments of enlightened, ecstatic wonder. It becomes unavoidable to consider how we buy, borrow, steal and generally use and abuse books for our own complicated ends.
Written with characteristic sharp and honest humour, The Year of Reading Dangerously is an affirmation of the pleasure of reading and a challenge to everyone who loves books but has forgotten how to read. Out of serious enquiries into commercialism, mediocrity and our literary prejudices emerges a very funny account of one man's attempt to read more dangerously.
Like nothing else I have ever read a combination of criticism and memoir that is astute, tender, funny and often wickedly ironic Peter Conrad, Observer
Very funny this is High Fidelity for bookworms Christian House, Daily Telegraph
Brilliant. All these books should count themselves lucky to have been read by Andy Miller Stewart Lee
A readable, often funny account This is much more than a succession of verdicts on famous books. Its also an autobiography told through books reminiscent both in style and perceptiveness of Nick Hornby. Millers theme is that books arent separate from life Perhaps one book never changed anyones life; but 50 of them can. Brandon Robshaw, Independent
Hilarious and touching If you dont like to read, this book is probably not for you, but Dan Brown remains on sale Jenny Colgan, author of Welcome to Rosie Hopkins Sweetshop of Dreams
I loved this book challenging, controversial and very funny David Nobbs, author of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin
Andy Miller is a very funny writer. And this hymn to reading is a delight. The chapter on Herman Melville and Dan Brown had me howling with pleasure. PS. It will also make you feel a bit well-read Matt Haig, author of The Humans
Brilliant Lucy Mangan, author of My Family and Other Disasters
Andy Miller was leading a normal life of quiet desperation when he discovered that he was no longer reading with any plan or pleasure. Usually books about books as therapy are resistible but The Year of Reading Dangerously is a sweet exception. Amiable, circumstantial, amusing, charming The Times
A witty self-help guide to managing ones bookshelves TLS
Like Bill Bryson being locked in the British Library for his own good, The Year of Reading Dangerously is clever, inspiring and shh! laugh-out-loud funny Neil Perryman, author of Adventures with the Wife in Space
By turns witty and profound Daily Telegraph
Andy Miller is a reader, author and editor of books. His writing has appeared in numerous publications, including the Times, the Telegraph, the Guardian, Esquire and Mojo. His first book Tilting at Windmills: How I Tried to Stop Worrying and Love Sport was published in 2002; his acclaimed study of the Kinks Village Green Preservation Society LP followed in 2004. In a career spanning twenty years, he has worked with Charlie Brooker, Stewart Lee, the League of Gentlemen, Sacha Baron Cohen and Count Arthur Strong, amongst many others. He lives in Kent with his wife and son.