How to Read and Why
By (Author) Harold Bloom
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
3rd September 2001
3rd September 2001
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
801.3
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
200g
In the vastly influential "The Western Canon", Harold Bloom outlined what we should read to understand a greater depth of the individual self. "How to Read and Why" continues the argument and focusses on how we use literature in order to gain deeper self-awareness. Poems, stories, novels, plays and parables are all analyzed as forms of writing as immersion, the language of individuality and inwardness: Shakespeare's sonnets, the short stories of Hemingway and de Cervantes, the novels of Proust and Calvino, Sophocles's "Oedipus Rex" and Mark's Gospel. Harold Bloom also addresses the idea of why we read: increased individuality, respite from visual bombardment, a return to "deep feeling" and "deep thinking".
'How to Read and Why ... is sensationally alert to the joys of reading; and practically every page has some useful insight, some energising challenge.' INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY 'It would be possible to fill a review of Bloom's work with his own phrases, so prodical is he of insight . . . he is never less than memorable.' THE TIMES 'Bloom's love of great literature is contagious. It sent me off anew to Proust, to Flannery O'Connor, to Italo Calvino; and for the first time to many others.' GUARDIAN '...there is a very great deal of profit and enjoyment to be had from these pages" FINANCIAL TIMES 'Bloom is the kind of infuriating, eccentric and ultimately inspiring teacher that we all need. If you want a survey course of the best reading around start here.' SUNDAY HERALD
Described in the New York Times as ' a colossus among critics [with] an encyclopedic intellect, exuberant eccentricity, a massive love of literature. The legend of his genius spans four decades' , Harold Bloom was born to a Yiddish-speaking family and learnt to speak English by reading the works of William Blake. He studied at Cornell, Pembroke College, Cambridge and Yale, and is Professor of Humanities at Yale and Professor of English at New York Universities, a regular contributor to literary journals and the recipient of many prizes and awards.